Approved certificate Authority for Twilio - https

I am trying to connect to a secure webservice from Twilio. Twilio's documentation states they only approve connecting to secure sites issued by CA's approved by Mozilla. The link (https://mozillacaprogram.secure.force.com/CA/IncludedCACertificateReport) of the approved CA's listed in in Twilio is broken.
But after a little bit of googling it appears Mozilla recognizes "The Internet Security Research Group (ISRG)" as a valid CA.
My certificate is signed by "Let's Encrypt Authority" formally known as "The Internet Security Research Group (ISRG)"
I have never had a browser issue using this authority and all the on-line certificate validation sites I have tested indicate there is no problem with my certificate.
The Twilio error I am receiving is
Error - 11237 Certificate Invalid - Could not find path to certificate
My guess is Twilio does not recognize this CA as a legit signing authority which is unfortunate because they have over 36 Million certificates active.
Anybody using this authority?
Any suggestions on a proxy?
Could this be an issue on Twilio's side?

Do you by any chance use the "cert.pem" file as your certificate? If so, use "fullchain.pem" instead.
Let's Encrypt's certbot generates 4 files, https://certbot.eff.org/docs/using.html#where-certs.
Of those, cert.pem contains only your server certificate, but not the full chain up to the root CA. And according to Twilio's docs, https://www.twilio.com/docs/api/errors/11237, you need the certificate file with the full chain, which would be fullchain.pem

Related

Chrome on MacOS raises a "ERR_CERT_WEAK_SIGNATURE_ALGORITHM" warning

I got the error NET::ERR_CERT_WEAK_SIGNATURE_ALGORITHM when accessing one website using Chrome browser on macOS. The url of the website is corporate / internal so I can't paste the url here (you won't have access anyhow).
Chrome version 75.0.3770.142.
macOS version is Mojave (10.14.4).
Chrome devtools Security tab show 2 errors:
Certificate - insecure (SHA-1) : The certificate chain for this site contains a certificate signed using SHA-1.
Certificate - missing : This site is missing a valid, trusted certificate (net::ERR_CERT_WEAK_SIGNATURE_ALGORITHM).
I can bypass the warning, but it come back after each page change/page refresh (so boring).
I know why the warning 1 is shown: the leaf certificate is signed with a certificate which signature algorithm is SHA-1 with RSA. Chrome detects this as weak. (I'm ok with this behavior)
I guess the warning 1 implies the warning 2: the leaf certificate can't be trusted.
The things I don't understand are:
why I don't have the problem using Firefox, on the same macOS computer
why I don't have the same problem using Chrome, same version, from another macOS computer
why I don't have the same problem using Chrome, same version, from a Windows computer
As a side note, Chrome on Windows computer show the same Certificate - insecure (SHA-1), but the warning 2 ERR_CERT_WEAK_SIGNATURE_ALGORITHM is not present.
This drives me crazy !
Does anyone have an idea on this ?
Does anyone knows how/when/why those warnings are raised ? (I may look into Chromium source code but I don't know if Chromium handles this mecanism)
I really don't understand why there are such different behavior on configurations that looks similars...
Thanks for your help,
Romain
The URL is corporate, so the certificate is signed by your corporation. This is normal for many corporative sites/intranets.
Chrome assumes SHA1 is weak, but this is OK. It is the company certificate for the corporative intranet (i am assuming it is an intranet URL, or alike), so no problem it uses SHA1.
The site is missing a valid trusted certificate, means the current URL certificate could not be validated by any worldwide authority (this is normal, it was created by the intranet admin, internally, for internal use), and then the message is warning you that it is not trustable: Not trustable here means your computer does not know what to do, it tried check it to validate via internet if it could be trusted but it couldn't find any authority who replied, so the warning is for you to take some action (ignore, avoid the url, check the certificate, or trust it)
Solution:
On MacOS you have to add that certificate to the KeyChain, this way you are intentionally telling the operating system and any application who need to verify the certificate that it is trustable.
To do it:
open the certificate by clicking "View Certificate" on Chrome (like it is on your image above)
Once it is opened, click on its square drawing (difficult to explain this, I will put a picture below), and
Drag the certificate to your desktop (or any folder, this is temporary)
Go to finder, double click the certificate you just saved, you will se a dialog box like the image below:
Click Add (keychain must be login, like the above image)
Keychain Utility should open automatically at this point, if it doesn't, open KeyChain Utility on your Mac. Locate the certificate inside the Login Keychain (example picture below)
You'll see it was added, but yet not trusted. So we will tell the system we trust it, and by trusting it applications like Chrome and Safari will not display that warning anymore. Because they will check that the system trust that certificate for SSL connections.
Double Click it on the Keychain, it will open, click the little triangle to expand "Trust" item.
Select the item "Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)", and put the value "Always Trust"
Close the certificate by clicking on the red X button on its window. It will ask for your password to save the new settings for the certificate.
Put your password, click Update Settings
It will now show a blue icon, along with a message telling it is marked as trusted for your account.
This is it.
The Chrome messages will disappear because now that certificate is trusted.
Note: You may be thinking now... "I never did it on the other Mac" and you explained that you don't have that problem on Chrome on that other Mac. I suppose on the other Mac you have accessed that corporative URL using Safari at least once. When you access via Safari it will present you a similar warning like Chrome does, but if you ACCEPT it on Safari, it automatically does all this tutorial procedure for you transparently: it just ask if you want to proceed anyway, you click "proceed", Safari asks you for your password then it put the certificate on the keychain and mark it as trusted [exactly like we did] but transparently. And the next time you access the corporate URL you will not be asked because its certificate is already trusted on your keychain. Later if you then access it using Chrome it will not ask you, because it will see that the keychain already has that corporate certificate as trusted.
This is very probably why your other Mac does not have this situation.
PS: I could have answered here just: Access it using Safari, accept and proceed, and it will never ask again. But this would not be the correct answer. It would not explain the reason, and would be out of your presented scenario. So since you are using Chrome, I described this procedure considering the exact application and the exact situation that you have presented here, clarifying the reasons behind it.
Of course, now, since you know there is 2 ways to make this certificate installation procedure, you can opt for the one you like better.
_
Note: as mentioned by #patrick-mevzek
"On MacOS you have to add that certificate to the KeyChain", and you
will need to to it again each time the certificate changes or is
renewed. And if signed by a private CA, and if you add the CA in the
trust store, you are then open to various MitM attacks, as this CA can
sign certificates for any name, which is/may typically be the standard
setup inside corporate PKIs, but you have to be aware of consequences.
"
I agree with #patrick-mevzek, he is right and he made an important observation on this topic.
I'm extending the point he mentioned (specifically for MacOS) by showing how you can check if the corporate certificate you are about to add to your keychain is a CA Certificate or just a common innofensive end-to-end SSL certificate.
Open that certificate again, scroll down the information of it, until you find the item "usage" as shown on the picture below.
On the image below, there are 2 kind of certificates:
on the left, there is a CA Certificate: it can be used as MitM decryptor if your company wanted. It would only require a proxy between you and the internet, where your browser traffic would passes through. And if you have this kind of certificate trusted on your keychain, you have to be aware that the company proxy can (if a malicious admin wanted) decrypt your encrypted HTTPS traffic and log every confidential information on your connection to anywhere.
on the right, there is a simple and common SSL Certificate used by all of websites and internet domains, its purpose is just end-to-end encryption between you and the visited domain, to encrypt your traffic. It cannot be used as a MitM decryptor of your connection traffic data. This kind is totally safe to be trusted on your keychain.
Let's consider that you have the dangerous case, which the certificate is a CA Certificate and you added and trusted it.
Is there a way for you to know if your traffic is being decrypted by your company and your information being exposed?
Yes, there is.
On any browser, when you are accessing any important site, choose a bank for example, for this example I am choosing "hsbc.com.br", and I will show both situations:
The normal end-to-end encryption as it always must be
The MitM situation decrypting the banking sensitive private data.
While accessing any important https site, even if you see the Green icon on chrome or safari telling the connection is encrypted, check the certificate of it if you want to be sure that nobody is in the middle.
_
Here is the normal & SECURE situation:
HSBC Certificate is issued by DigiCert Inc and also is of type EV, which offer stronger guarantee of identity.
Now lets put a proxy in the middle, and do the MitM atack.
Here is the same HSBC bank I just acessed minutes ago, but I inserted a MitM proxy technic on my network, and I trusted that kind of certificate [CA Certificate] on my MacOS keychain.
Let's see what Chrome tells about the banking website:
It is telling me that it is secure, and also says that my information will be private!
But Chrome is WRONG!! (And it doesn't know it is wrong, because it is beyond it)
Lets open the certificate again: (I just activated the proxy and reloaded the page)
It is easy to notice the difference, the fake HSBC certificate was issued by my own personal certificate authority inside my network. This was done automatically by my proxy, which is capable of reading all the information I insert on the HSBC bank website, in pure TXT format, in both ways. Then it encrypts the data again and send to my Browser, and vice versa, do the same re-encryption while talking to HSBC servers.
The browser "think" that everything is OK, because the connection is encrypted, the site name on the certificate MATCHES the URL address I am accessing, the certificate is valid, and the CA Authority it is trusted on my keychain!
Everything technically is fine, except that is not.
This is the real danger, exposed, as mentioned by #patrick-mevzek that you have to be aware.

Signing ClickOnce application with code signing certificate, but publisher still unknown

I have 2 code signing certificates, for both CSR is created same way, also import and export is done same way. The only difference that I see is that one of certificates Common name contains Quotes, and the other doesn't.
e.g.
some cert and
some "cert"
CSR creation
Request format PKCS #10
disabled "Strong private key encryption"
Entered Common name, Organization, Locality, State, Country
2048 bytes for private key
set private key exportable
Import
place all certificates in Personal store
Export
Include all certificates if possible
Enable certificate privacy
encryption algorithm TripleDES-SHA1
Misleading thing is that this Common name value is NOT taken from the value I entered when I created CSR request
I am using those certificates to sign Winforms applications in Visual Studio. Certificate without Quotes in common name is working correctly (i.e. when I install application user is not getting security warning about unknown publisher), but when I install application which is signed with the other Code signing certificate (with Quotes in Common name) - it does not recognize Publisher. No error when published my application. When I take a look at setup.exe properties in Windows Explorer I see a Digital signatures tab which contains row for my certificate.
I tried to sign files with signtool and then verify - it said that certificate is valid.
I tried to get help from godaddy.com where I bought my certificate, they said that it should work with quotes, too, but didn't offer help to solve the issue. Rekey also didn't help.
I see that there are some suggestions to use Pre Publish, Post Build tasks, but I am not using those for my first certificate which is working.
So, is anyone here using code signing certificate for Winforms application with common name having quotes in it? Or maybe anyone knows about this problem and how to solve it?
Had to revoke (common name which is entered when creating CSR is not taken into account, so rekeying is not enough!) my code signing certificate and create from start without quotes/brackets in company name.
So this means, you will have to wait again for few days, because verification process is made from start again. When you will be contacted by issuer, they will verify / ask you about company name - make sure that they do not include quotes/brackets.
Revoking means that you will basically have to buy your certificate once more, because after you revoke it (at least in godaddy case) in your account you don't have options to create it again. So, you have to contact support (use call center and not chat ;)

Why does this SSL certificate validate fine in browsers, but not in .NET/Silverlight?

If I access https://www.mynetfone.com.au in a browser, the cerificate validates fine.
To do anything with this site in .NET, I have to override ServicePointManager and turn certificate validation off.
This becomes more of a problem with Windows Phone 7, where there is no way to change certificate validation, and no way to remove certificates once you add them.
Is there anything obviously wrong with the certificate? What would the company have to do to fix it?
There are only a limited number of root certificate authorities with root certificates installed by default. For more details see "Windows Phone 7 Root Certificates_FINAL_121610.pdf" available from http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?displaylang=en&id=8842
The other docs on that page also provide more information about SSL & certificates on the phone.

How do certificate avoid the man in the middle attack?

I have another question to security in the web.
If I understand it correctly certificates are for identify who you really are. So the man in the middle attack isn't possible.
But when I see this image:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2b/Digital_Signature_diagram.svg/800px-Digital_Signature_diagram.svg.png
I think a man in the middle attack is possible. You could split the Signature, the certificate from the data. Make your own signature with your fake data and send the fake data with the fake signature (but the right certificate) to the server/client.
What I also not understand in this picture is where the certificate gets checked, on the verification side.
thanks.
SCBoy
Make your own signature with your fake data and send the fake data with the fake signature (but the right certificate) to the server/client.
The problem is that the receiver will then look at the fake signature and see that it does not match the certificate of the real sender.
You can only create signatures that match a given certificate when you have the correct private key for that certificate (even though the certificate itself is public, that is the magic of asymmetric cryptography). This private key is being kept secret by the owner of the certificate (the original sender of the message).
The man-in-the-middle is prevented by distributing trusted certificates in advance.
You have to trust the authenticity of the certificates, either by trusting them directly (root certificates) or by trusting a chain of signatures on the certificate leading up to one that you trust.
If the man in the middle can make you believe that his fake certificate is the real deal, then the whole system fails.

Is there a way to make Firefox ignore invalid ssl-certificates?

I am maintaining a few web applications. The development and qa environments use invalid/outdated ssl-certificates.
Although it is generally a good thing, that Firefox makes me click like a dozen times to accept the certificate, this is pretty annoying.
Is there a configuration-parameter to make Firefox (and possibly IE too) accept any ssl-certificate?
EDIT: I have accepted the solution, that worked. But thanks to all the people that have advised to use self-signed certificates. I am totally aware, that the accepted solution leaves me with a gaping security hole. Nonetheless I am to lazy to change the certificate for all the applications and all the environments...
But I also advice anybody strongly to leave validation enabled!
Try Add Exception: FireFox -> Tools -> Advanced -> View Certificates -> Servers -> Add Exception.
I ran into this issue when trying to get to one of my companies intranet sites. Here is the solution I used:
enter about:config into the firefox address bar and agree to continue.
search for the preference named security.ssl.enable_ocsp_stapling.
double-click this item to change its value to false.
This will lower your security as you will be able to view sites with invalid certs. Firefox will still prompt you that the cert is invalid and you have the choice to proceed forward, so it was worth the risk for me.
Go to Tools > Options > Advanced "Tab"(?) > Encryption Tab
Click the "Validation" button, and uncheck the checkbox for checking validity
Be advised though that this is pretty unsecure as it leaves you wide open to accept any invalid certificate. I'd only do this if using the browser on an Intranet where the validity of the cert isn't a concern to you, or you aren't concerned in general.
In the current Firefox browser (v. 99.0.1) I was getting this error when looking at Web Developer Tools \ Network tab:
MOZILLA_PKIX_ERROR_SELF_SIGNED_CERT
I was trying to debug an Angular app which is served at https://localhost:4200... however the real port it's pointing to and being debugged from in Visual Studio 2022 is 44322.
I had to follow these steps to fix the issue:
Open Firefox Settings;
Look for Privacy & Security tab on the left;
Scroll down to the bottom and look for Certificates;
View Certificates;
In this window you must click Add Exception and enter the location. In my case it was:
https://localhost:44322
Click Get Certificate button;
Click Confirm Security Exception button.
After that, try reloading your page.
Instead of using invalid/outdated SSL certificates, why not use self-signed SSL certificates? Then you can add an exception in Firefox for just that site.
Using a free certificate is a better idea if your developers use Firefox 3. Firefox 3 complains loudly about self-signed certificates, and it is a major annoyance.
If you have a valid but untrusted ssl-certificates you can import it in Extras/Properties/Advanced/Encryption --> View Certificates. After Importing ist as "Servers" you have to "Edit trust" to "Trust the authenticity of this certifikate" and that' it.
I always have trouble with recording secure websites with HP VuGen and Performance Center
Create some nice new 10 year certificates and install them. The procedure is fairly easy.
Start at (1B) Generate your own CA (Certificate Authority) on this web page: Creating Certificate Authorities and self-signed SSL certificates and generate your CA Certificate and Key. Once you have these, generate your Server Certificate and Key. Create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) and then sign the Server Key with the CA Certificate. Now install your Server Certificate and Key on the web server as usual, and import the CA Certificate into Internet Explorer's Trusted Root Certification Authority Store (used by the Flex uploader and Chrome as well) and into Firefox's Certificate Manager Authorities Store on each workstation that needs to access the server using the self-signed, CA-signed server key/certificate pair.
You now should not see any warning about using self-signed Certificates as the browsers will find the CA certificate in the Trust Store and verify the server key has been signed by this trusted certificate. Also in e-commerce applications like Magento, the Flex image uploader will now function in Firefox without the dreaded "Self-signed certificate" error message.
For a secure alternative, try the Perspectives Firefox add-on
If this link doesn't work try this one:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/perspectives/
The MitM Me addon will do this - but I think self-signed certificates is probably a better solution.

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