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PGP hole could let unauthorized people decode e-mail.  Appeared in CNN.
NEW YORK (AP) -- Snoopers on the Internet could decode sensitive e-mail
messages simply by tricking recipients into hitting the reply button,
computer security researchers warned Monday.
The flaw affects software using Pretty Good Privacy, the most popular tool
for scrambling e-mail.
Researchers at Columbia University and Counterpane Internet Security Inc.
found that someone intercepting an encrypted message could descramble it
by repackaging the message and passing it on to the recipient.
The message would appear as gibberish, possibly prompting the recipient to
request a resend.
If the recipient includes the original text with that request -- as many
people have their configured their software to do automatically when they
reply -- the interceptor could then read the original message.
Bruce Schneier, Counterpane's chief technology officer, said most people
would never dream that security can be compromised simply by returning
gibberish.
Intercepting a message is trivial using software known as sniffers, and
companies may use such programs to monitor employees on its network. An
oppressive government may snoop on its citizens if it also controls
service providers or other access points.
Thus, human rights workers, some FBI agents and even the son of a jailed
mobster have used PGP to encrypt messages sent over the Internet and data
stored on computers.
So powerful is the technology that the United States government until 1999
sought to restrict its sale out of fears that criminals, terrorists and
foreign nations might use it.
Serious, but tough to exploit
Jon Callas, principal author of the OpenPGP standard at the Internet
Engineering Task Force, said the vulnerability is serious but very
difficult to exploit.
And, he said, many PGP software packages compress messages before sending.
Researchers found that such compression can sometimes thwart the
unauthorized decoding.
Nonetheless, an update to the OpenPGP standard was to be released Monday
to coincide with the announcement of the flaw. Many developers already
have begun to write software fixes, Callas said.
In the meantime, Schneier and Callas urged recipients of PGP e-mail to
avoid including full text of messages when replying.
Schneier and co-researchers Kahil Jallad and Jonathan Katz, who were at
Columbia University when they discovered the flaw, identified its
possibility about a year ago. The latest paper offered a demonstration of
the flaw in practice.
The findings come weeks after researchers at eEye Digital Security Inc.
discovered that hackers could exploit a programming flaw in companion
software -- a plug-in for Microsoft Corp.'s Outlook program -- to attack a
user's computer and in some cases, unscramble messages.
In neither case does the flaw affect the actual encrypting formulas used
to scramble messages.

August 12, 2002.
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