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  3. I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems.

I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems.

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  • q@glauca.spaceQ q@glauca.space

    @badkeys You thought 384-bit was bad? I recently found a live, in daily use, 256-bit key in a, shall we say, large government entity that should know better (would rather not say much more publicly as its relevant to a paper under submission).

    16af93@wetdry.world1 This user is from outside of this forum
    16af93@wetdry.world1 This user is from outside of this forum
    16af93@wetdry.world
    wrote last edited by
    #18

    @q @badkeys BSI at it again?

    q@glauca.spaceQ T 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • 16af93@wetdry.world1 16af93@wetdry.world

      @q @badkeys BSI at it again?

      q@glauca.spaceQ This user is from outside of this forum
      q@glauca.spaceQ This user is from outside of this forum
      q@glauca.space
      wrote last edited by
      #19

      @16af93 @badkeys for once, its not the Germans

      16af93@wetdry.world1 sys64738@www.librepunk.clubS 2 Replies Last reply
      0
      • q@glauca.spaceQ q@glauca.space

        @16af93 @badkeys for once, its not the Germans

        16af93@wetdry.world1 This user is from outside of this forum
        16af93@wetdry.world1 This user is from outside of this forum
        16af93@wetdry.world
        wrote last edited by
        #20

        @q @badkeys

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

          I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

          I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

          384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
          -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
          MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
          j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
          LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
          9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
          AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
          7ez94w==
          -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

          yacc143@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
          yacc143@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
          yacc143@mastodon.social
          wrote last edited by
          #21

          @badkeys
          That was crackable with private entity resources decades ago.

          That's not even funny.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • q@glauca.spaceQ q@glauca.space

            @16af93 @badkeys for once, its not the Germans

            sys64738@www.librepunk.clubS This user is from outside of this forum
            sys64738@www.librepunk.clubS This user is from outside of this forum
            sys64738@www.librepunk.club
            wrote last edited by
            #22

            @q @16af93 @badkeys iirc 256-bit rsa is satcomms 'standards'

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

              I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

              I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

              384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
              -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
              MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
              j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
              LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
              9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
              AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
              7ez94w==
              -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

              tanja@mastodon.catgirl.cloudT This user is from outside of this forum
              tanja@mastodon.catgirl.cloudT This user is from outside of this forum
              tanja@mastodon.catgirl.cloud
              wrote last edited by
              #23

              @badkeys@infosec.exchange oooofffff

              But why would they turn down the bug bounty????

              <img class="not-responsive emoji" src="https://content.mastodon.catgirl.cloud/custom_emojis/images/000/055/198/original/neocat_googly_shocked.png" title=":neocat_googly_shocked:" />

              oscherler@tooting.chO 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

                I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

                I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

                384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
                -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
                MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
                j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
                LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
                9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
                AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
                7ez94w==
                -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

                jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                jane@smolhaj.social
                wrote last edited by
                #24

                @networkexception Now I want T-Systems involved into Synapse Pro development. Have an ISP approved way when your matrix message "is not decryptable" to decrypt it after a few hours of compute time. It's not a bug, it's a feature they provide if their bug bounty rejects this.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

                  I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

                  I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

                  384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
                  -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
                  MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
                  j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
                  LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
                  9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
                  AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
                  7ez94w==
                  -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

                  lunareclipse@snug.moeL This user is from outside of this forum
                  lunareclipse@snug.moeL This user is from outside of this forum
                  lunareclipse@snug.moe
                  wrote last edited by
                  #25

                  @badkeys bad companies that don't pay out bug bounties can have uncoordinated public disclosure as a treat :3

                  kbruen@procial.tchncs.deK yama@tech.lgbtY 2 Replies Last reply
                  1
                  0
                  • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

                    I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

                    I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

                    384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
                    -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
                    MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
                    j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
                    LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
                    9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
                    AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
                    7ez94w==
                    -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

                    keksdosenmann@mastodon.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                    keksdosenmann@mastodon.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                    keksdosenmann@mastodon.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #26

                    @badkeys Telekom. Die machen das.

                    christianrickert@23.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    0
                    • bebef@mastodon.socialB bebef@mastodon.social

                      @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission Had the same issue just recently. I wonder how this can even be legal. 🤔

                      I wanted to ask a lawyer about this, but never came around doing so.

                      K This user is from outside of this forum
                      K This user is from outside of this forum
                      kkarhan@jorts.horse
                      wrote last edited by
                      #27

                      @Bebef @momo @badkeys Neither did I.

                      And the next-best qualified lawyer I'd know in that part is @wbs_legal.

                      • Sadly there's no legal precedent to establish the same "duty to deliver" as with #PostalOperators which ain't allowed to do anything unless explicitly instructed by the reciever or served a warrant by a judge.
                        • And obviously regulators like @BNetzA & @EUCommission likely ain't even aware of this issue since #ConsumerProtection doesn't apply to #SmallBusinesses!
                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • bebef@mastodon.socialB bebef@mastodon.social

                        @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission Had the same issue just recently. I wonder how this can even be legal. 🤔

                        I wanted to ask a lawyer about this, but never came around doing so.

                        yacc143@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                        yacc143@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                        yacc143@mastodon.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #28

                        @Bebef
                        It's probably not, some countries have really tough laws that they apply to email delivery and privacy that makes even spam filtering a legally dicey proposition

                        But let me put it like this, who wants to sue a company that has a legal budget bigger than the whole government budget of some of the poorer EU MS?

                        And in the end as long as the users won't start moving their fat posteriors away from the big tech monopolies, ...
                        @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission

                        K yacc143@mastodon.socialY 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

                          I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

                          I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

                          384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
                          -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
                          MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
                          j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
                          LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
                          9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
                          AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
                          7ez94w==
                          -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

                          nitram2342@chaos.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                          nitram2342@chaos.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                          nitram2342@chaos.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #29

                          @badkeys This is the mastodon method of converting a private key into a public key. Scnr.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
                          • yacc143@mastodon.socialY yacc143@mastodon.social

                            @Bebef
                            It's probably not, some countries have really tough laws that they apply to email delivery and privacy that makes even spam filtering a legally dicey proposition

                            But let me put it like this, who wants to sue a company that has a legal budget bigger than the whole government budget of some of the poorer EU MS?

                            And in the end as long as the users won't start moving their fat posteriors away from the big tech monopolies, ...
                            @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission

                            K This user is from outside of this forum
                            K This user is from outside of this forum
                            kkarhan@jorts.horse
                            wrote last edited by
                            #30

                            @yacc143 @Bebef @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission Depends...

                            In #Germany, Corporations have to archive ALL #eMails in an automated, manipulation-proof manner with indexability (incl. attachments) for #Auditability purposes.

                            • That's why you get stuff like benno MailArchiv.

                            That being said the #cowardice of #regulators is appauling and if they ain't gonna do their job, they should vacate their positions and let others do it instead.

                            • I'd happily do this work!
                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • yacc143@mastodon.socialY yacc143@mastodon.social

                              @Bebef
                              It's probably not, some countries have really tough laws that they apply to email delivery and privacy that makes even spam filtering a legally dicey proposition

                              But let me put it like this, who wants to sue a company that has a legal budget bigger than the whole government budget of some of the poorer EU MS?

                              And in the end as long as the users won't start moving their fat posteriors away from the big tech monopolies, ...
                              @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission

                              yacc143@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                              yacc143@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                              yacc143@mastodon.social
                              wrote last edited by
                              #31

                              @Bebef
                              The really odd thing is it's not the oldies that nowadays are a problem, it's the youngsters, we literally had a complaint today about the PIM/office suite we use, our CEO nicely played that one. He's open to all proposals for alternatives from a company headquartered in the EEA for legal reasons.

                              Interestingly the C level has no problem IMAP, and accessing the calendar over CalDAV. But the youngsters have never heard of these @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission

                              yacc143@mastodon.socialY 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • yacc143@mastodon.socialY yacc143@mastodon.social

                                @Bebef
                                The really odd thing is it's not the oldies that nowadays are a problem, it's the youngsters, we literally had a complaint today about the PIM/office suite we use, our CEO nicely played that one. He's open to all proposals for alternatives from a company headquartered in the EEA for legal reasons.

                                Interestingly the C level has no problem IMAP, and accessing the calendar over CalDAV. But the youngsters have never heard of these @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission

                                yacc143@mastodon.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
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                                yacc143@mastodon.social
                                wrote last edited by
                                #32

                                things. And are shocked that email can be provided by something else then Google, outlook or Apple. On which of these is our email hosted I was asked. I had to explain very slowly that we are on the small option "other".
                                @kkarhan @momo @badkeys @BNetzA @EUCommission @Bebef

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • tanja@mastodon.catgirl.cloudT tanja@mastodon.catgirl.cloud

                                  @badkeys@infosec.exchange oooofffff

                                  But why would they turn down the bug bounty????

                                  <img class="not-responsive emoji" src="https://content.mastodon.catgirl.cloud/custom_emojis/images/000/055/198/original/neocat_googly_shocked.png" title=":neocat_googly_shocked:" />

                                  oscherler@tooting.chO This user is from outside of this forum
                                  oscherler@tooting.chO This user is from outside of this forum
                                  oscherler@tooting.ch
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #33

                                  @tanja Because they’re cheap assholes? Just a wild guess.

                                  m_berberich@chaos.socialM 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • keksdosenmann@mastodon.socialK keksdosenmann@mastodon.social

                                    @badkeys Telekom. Die machen das.

                                    christianrickert@23.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    christianrickert@23.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                    christianrickert@23.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #34

                                    @keksdosenmann @badkeys

                                    Die schaffen uns. 😮‍💨

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    0
                                    • lunareclipse@snug.moeL lunareclipse@snug.moe

                                      @badkeys bad companies that don't pay out bug bounties can have uncoordinated public disclosure as a treat :3

                                      kbruen@procial.tchncs.deK This user is from outside of this forum
                                      kbruen@procial.tchncs.deK This user is from outside of this forum
                                      kbruen@procial.tchncs.de
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #35

                                      @lunareclipse@snug.moe @badkeys@infosec.exchange I mean, if it's out of scope, then it's not even a disclosure, as "out of scope" is an admittance that it's no biggie for the information to be public to begin with, right?

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

                                        I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

                                        I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

                                        384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
                                        -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
                                        MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
                                        j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
                                        LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
                                        9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
                                        AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
                                        7ez94w==
                                        -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

                                        robot@wetdry.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
                                        robot@wetdry.worldR This user is from outside of this forum
                                        robot@wetdry.world
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #36

                                        @badkeys ReallySecureAlgorithm

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • badkeys@infosec.exchangeB badkeys@infosec.exchange

                                          I reported an insecure DKIM key to Deutsche Telekom / T-Systems. They first asked me to further explain things (not sure why 'Here's your DKIM private key' needs more explanation, but whatever...). Then they told me it's out of scope for their bugbounty.

                                          I guess then there's really no reason not to tell you: They have a 384 bit RSA DKIM key configured at: dkim._domainkey.t-systems.nl

                                          384 bit RSA is... how shall I put it? I think 512 bit is the lowest RSA key size that was ever really used. 384 bit RSA is crackable in a few hours on a modern PC (using cado-nfs). The private key is:
                                          -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
                                          MIHxAgEAAjEAtTliQYV2Xvx1OGkDyOL799BTFEuobY2dn2AgtiKCQgrh78NVK1JK
                                          j0yRXgNnPpGBAgMBAAECMF0t+TBZUCi8xATSMij7VLTxv5Xi5OIXesNiXOKtYIRP
                                          LkpYfR5PggaMScfbmqSssQIZAMwOhm9d7Y7Qi7I2j1AlYbiqdtqO54T7FQIZAONa
                                          9dJFkC6lM3EPXR+0SZ4dqwwpiM0nvQIYYgz8thi5JK264ohq9sTvnu9yKvUN9I09
                                          AhgfgMYZKcxtujRjkSZtMzUUNLYzzDmJe90CGDKwqcBI0v9ChaR8WHht+/chMdxj
                                          7ez94w==
                                          -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

                                          diziet@mastodon.me.ukD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          diziet@mastodon.me.ukD This user is from outside of this forum
                                          diziet@mastodon.me.uk
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #37

                                          @badkeys
                                          Not the same at all, but here are most of my dkim private keys https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/dkim-rotate/README.txt

                                          badrihippo@fosstodon.orgB 1 Reply Last reply
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