January 16, 2017 By Larry Loeb 2 min read

GoDaddy recently discovered that almost 9,000 SSL certificates that it has issued since July 29, 2016, had to be revoked and reissued. A code bug that occurred during a service upgrade caused this SSL certificate security problem.

In July, GoDaddy changed its validation code. This change unintentionally allowed certain servers that were configured in a particular way to bypass GoDaddy’s authentication process, which is necessary to deliver an SSL certificate.

SSL Certificate Security Incident Reported

Wayne Thayer, GoDaddy’s general manager of security products, declared in an incident report that the company had fixed the problem.

“We are currently unaware of any malicious exploitation of this bug to procure a certificate for a domain that was not authorized,” he wrote. “The customer who discovered the bug revoked the certificate they obtained and subsequent certificates issued as the result of requests used for testing by Microsoft and GoDaddy have been revoked. Further, any certificate requests made for domains we flag as high-risk were also subjected to manual review, rather than being issued purely based on an invalid domain authorization.”

SecurityWeek noted that GoDaddy has identified 8,951 certificates that were issued without the proper domain validation. That would be about 2 percent of the total number of certificates issued between July 29, 2016, and Jan. 10, 2017. GoDaddy reported that the incident affected approximately 6,100 customers.

CA Inconsistency

Discussion on the Google board after Thayer’s incident report was published revolved around possible underlying operational inconsistency among certificate authorities (CA).

“As you will know, the method being used by GoDaddy here corresponds broadly to method 3.2.2.4.6 from ballot 169 — “Agreed-Upon Change to Website,” one user wrote. “Although this method is not currently in the BaselineRequirements due to it being part of ballot 182 and having a related IPR disclosure, at least one root store operator has suggested they are going to require strict adherence to the methods listed in that ballot by March 1.”

In other words, the exact implementation of a baseline requirement by a CA may vary from one CA to another. This points to a need for standardized approaches.

More from

New proposed federal data privacy law suggests big changes

3 min read - After years of work and unsuccessful attempts at legislation, a draft of a federal data privacy law was recently released. The United States House Committee on Energy and Commerce released the American Privacy Rights Act on April 7, 2024. Several issues stood in the way of passing legislation in the past, such as whether states could issue tougher rules and if individuals could sue companies for privacy violations.With the American Privacy Rights Act of 2024, the U.S. government established the…

AI cybersecurity solutions detect ransomware in under 60 seconds

2 min read - Worried about ransomware? If so, it’s not surprising. According to the World Economic Forum, for large cyber losses (€1 million+), the number of cases in which data is exfiltrated is increasing, doubling from 40% in 2019 to almost 80% in 2022. And more recent activity is tracking even higher.Meanwhile, other dangers are appearing on the horizon. For example, the 2024 IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence Index states that threat group investment is increasingly focused on generative AI attack tools.Criminals have been…

The major hardware flaw in Apple M-series chips

3 min read - The “need for speed” is having a negative impact on many Mac users right now. The Apple M-series chips, which are designed to deliver more consistent and faster performance than the Intel processors used in the past, have a vulnerability that can expose cryptographic keys, leading an attacker to reveal encrypted data. This critical security flaw, known as GoFetch, exploits a vulnerability found in the M-chips data memory-dependent prefetcher (DMP). DMP’s benefits and vulnerabilities DMP predicts memory addresses that the…

Topic updates

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