Impact
Using a remember-me cookie with an arbitrary username can cause Opencast to assume proper authentication for that user even if the remember-me cookie was incorrect given that the attacked endpoint also allows anonymous access.
This way, an attacker can, for example, fake a remember-me token, assume the identity of the global system administrator and request non-public content from the search service without ever providing any proper authentication.
Patches
This problem is fixed in Opencast 7.6 and Opencast 8.1
Workarounds
As a workaround for older, unpatched versions, disabling remember-me cookies in etc/security/mh_default_org.xml
will mitigate the problem but will obviously also disable this feature without obvious indication. To deactivate this, remove the following line from the security configuration:
References
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
References
Impact
Using a remember-me cookie with an arbitrary username can cause Opencast to assume proper authentication for that user even if the remember-me cookie was incorrect given that the attacked endpoint also allows anonymous access.
This way, an attacker can, for example, fake a remember-me token, assume the identity of the global system administrator and request non-public content from the search service without ever providing any proper authentication.
Patches
This problem is fixed in Opencast 7.6 and Opencast 8.1
Workarounds
As a workaround for older, unpatched versions, disabling remember-me cookies in
etc/security/mh_default_org.xml
will mitigate the problem but will obviously also disable this feature without obvious indication. To deactivate this, remove the following line from the security configuration:References
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
References