October 22, 2015 By Douglas Bonderud 2 min read

Browser cryptography is an evolving field. What was secure yesterday may not be secure today since both malicious actors and security researchers are looking for ways to break new encryption techniques or discover flaws in older algorithms. That’s the case with SHA-1 certificates: While theoretically broken for more than a decade, it’s only recently the cost of a collision attack became something most cybercrime groups and government agencies could afford.

Big browsers have committed to rejecting these certs by the start of 2017. But according to SC Magazine, Mozilla now is talking about moving up the timeline because costs keep falling and the chances of a malicious attack are rising. By June 2016, SHA-1 may be sidelined.

Conservative Estimate?

Much of the work done on SHA-1 came form security researcher Bruce Schneier. In 2012, he predicted that the cost of creating a collision attack — which forces two inputs to produce the same hash, giving attackers the ability to swap out benign functions for malicious content — would be $700,000 in 2015 but could quickly fall to just $143,000 by 2018. That meant SHA-1 collisions as a practical form of attack were at least three years away.

As reported by ZDNet, however, new data suggested that the price of collision is already down in the $120,000 range, and possibly as low as $75,000. Using a freestart collision model on a 64-GPU Kraken cluster, researchers found that it took only a few months to achieve a successful hack. More worrisome is that nearly 1 million websites still use signed SHA-1 certificates, giving cybercriminals ample attack surface once they’re able to front the (steadily falling) cost of needed compute power.

Mozilla Mandate

According to CSO Online, there’s already a consensus among major browser-makers and certificate authorities (CAs) that the time of SHA-1 is over. The CA/Browser Forum has decided that new SHA-1 certs should not be issued after Jan. 1, 2016, while browser-makers agreed that a year later — Jan. 1, 2017 — these certificates will no longer be trusted even if their end date extends past the January cutoff. Now, Mozilla is talking about moving up the cutoff date by six months, meaning that by July 1, 2016, SHA-1 could be on the outs.

Thomas Peyrin of Nanyang Technological University, one of the researchers who demonstrated the new risk of SHA-1 collisions, argued the tech industry should “accelerate the migration process toward SHA-2 and SHA-3 before such dramatic attacks become feasible.” And while there’s no doubt a Mozilla decision to move up the cutoff date would cause some inconvenience, the CA/Browser Forum seems to be backing the idea since it just withdrew a proposal from several major players to keep SHA-1 certs valid throughout 2016. With 24 percent of the top HTTPS websites still using the compromised certs, this is probably a good idea.

SHA-1 is out, and SHA-2 and 3 are in development. The cost of a collision attack is down — way down — and Mozilla wants to step up. Time will tell if security or simplicity carries the day.

More from

Change Healthcare attack expected to exceed $1 billion in costs

3 min read - The impact of the recent Change Healthcare cyberattack is unprecedented — and so are the costs. Rick Pollack, President and CEO of the American Hospital Association, stated, “The Change Healthcare cyberattack is the most significant and consequential incident of its kind against the U.S. healthcare system in history.”In a recent earnings call, UnitedHealth Group, the parent company of Change Healthcare, speculated on the overall data breach costs. When all is said and done, the total tally may reach $1 billion…

Remote access risks on the rise with CVE-2024-1708 and CVE-2024-1709

4 min read - On February 19, ConnectWise reported two vulnerabilities in its ScreenConnect product, CVE-2024-1708 and 1709. The first is an authentication bypass vulnerability, and the second is a path traversal vulnerability. Both made it possible for attackers to bypass authentication processes and execute remote code.While ConnectWise initially reported that the vulnerabilities had proof-of-concept but hadn’t been spotted in the wild, reports from customers quickly made it clear that hackers were actively exploring both flaws. As a result, the company created patches for…

Evolving red teaming for AI environments

2 min read - As AI becomes more ingrained in businesses and daily life, the importance of security grows more paramount. In fact, according to the IBM Institute for Business Value, 96% of executives say adopting generative AI (GenAI) makes a security breach likely in their organization in the next three years. Whether it’s a model performing unintended actions, generating misleading or harmful responses or revealing sensitive information, in the AI era security can no longer be an afterthought to innovation.AI red teaming is emerging…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today