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  3. #Signalapp doesn't actually delete messages when they're deleted (either manually or by automation).

#Signalapp doesn't actually delete messages when they're deleted (either manually or by automation).

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signalappfulldisclosureinfoseccybersecurity
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  • harrysintonen@infosec.exchangeH harrysintonen@infosec.exchange

    #Signalapp doesn't actually delete messages when they're deleted (either manually or by automation). The message deletion is written to Write-ahead Log, and the data is only truly deleted once Signal is restarted or threshold of 1000 pages is reached. For macOS Signal application, extra complication arises from the fact that the signal message database can be backed up before the database consolidation occurs. Large amount of the supposedly already deleted messages could be recovered from the device or backups.

    This concerns use cases where deleting messages actually getting removed in timely manner is of high importance and recovery of the deleted messages could lead to grave consequences.

    TL;DR: If you don't care about deleted messages being actually deleted you don't need to worry.

    Full advisory at: https://sintonen.fi/advisories/signal-deleted-but-not-forgotten.txt

    #fulldisclosure #infosec #cybersecurity

    mannanan@mas.toM This user is from outside of this forum
    mannanan@mas.toM This user is from outside of this forum
    mannanan@mas.to
    wrote last edited by
    #17

    @harrysintonen

    The more I hear about Signal, the worse it gets.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • avuko@infosec.exchangeA avuko@infosec.exchange

      @ajn142 @harrysintonen

      Had to look that one up, thanks for the reference.

      With notifications and keyboards, one could argue about the span of control (and responsibility). With app native storage, the control and responsibility seems to me to be squarely with Signal in this case.

      PS/FS: I haven’t and won’t verify this issue and/or PoC. Those days are long past for me.

      ajn142@infosec.exchangeA This user is from outside of this forum
      ajn142@infosec.exchangeA This user is from outside of this forum
      ajn142@infosec.exchange
      wrote last edited by
      #18

      @avuko @harrysintonen agreed completely. My point goes more to the Time Machine backup consideration.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • harrysintonen@infosec.exchangeH harrysintonen@infosec.exchange

        #Signalapp doesn't actually delete messages when they're deleted (either manually or by automation). The message deletion is written to Write-ahead Log, and the data is only truly deleted once Signal is restarted or threshold of 1000 pages is reached. For macOS Signal application, extra complication arises from the fact that the signal message database can be backed up before the database consolidation occurs. Large amount of the supposedly already deleted messages could be recovered from the device or backups.

        This concerns use cases where deleting messages actually getting removed in timely manner is of high importance and recovery of the deleted messages could lead to grave consequences.

        TL;DR: If you don't care about deleted messages being actually deleted you don't need to worry.

        Full advisory at: https://sintonen.fi/advisories/signal-deleted-but-not-forgotten.txt

        #fulldisclosure #infosec #cybersecurity

        ohir@social.vivaldi.netO This user is from outside of this forum
        ohir@social.vivaldi.netO This user is from outside of this forum
        ohir@social.vivaldi.net
        wrote last edited by
        #19

        @harrysintonen
        Signal team made many choices that are hard to explain convincingly to even apprentice in the secop wizardry.

        The one that I'd never got answer for (but iirc got a gh ban for buggin on it 😉 is

        Why Signal Desktop still can not be decoupled from Signal mobile app?.

        This restriction [1] apparently is meant to have messages stream from the less reachable desktop machines sent to the low confidence endpoint, i.e. a mobile phone. If enduser tries to "cheat" on whomever demanded this "feature" and keeps their mobile off, desktop endpoint will stop receiving messages until user allows mobile platform to decrypt past messages stream and reauthorize desktop anew.

        They are frank abot this I must admit. There is a warning on the desktop urging user to decrypt messages on the mobile or else desktop endpoint will get cut off.

        [1] technically it is possible to decouple active client on desktop then remove the mobile OS endpoint. It can be done (for a long time now) but not by an average enduser.

        --
        @briankrebs (due for boosting),
        @signalapp (I'd like to know your current narrative about "why").

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        • feld@friedcheese.usF feld@friedcheese.us
          @harrysintonen

          > This concerns use cases where deleting messages actually getting removed in timely manner is of high importance and recovery of the deleted messages could lead to grave consequences.

          > TL;DR: If you don't care about deleted messages being actually deleted you don't need to worry.

          But this is the main selling point of Signal's Perfect Forward Secrecy that everyone says is so important and nobody should use a messenger without it...

          PFS isn't really about security in the normal sense, it's about the data transmitted being ephemeral and irrecoverable through cryptographic guarantees. That's why DeltaChat's upcoming implementation will not use the PFS terminology but will be called "reliable deletion".

          So now we have another case of Signal's PFS being broken: first through the iOS notification database not being cleared properly, now through MacOS not actually removing the deleted messages from the database.

          I think people need to stop trusting Signal's word and start demanding detailed proof that their security promises hold up on every platform.
          tiredbun@akko.wtfT This user is from outside of this forum
          tiredbun@akko.wtfT This user is from outside of this forum
          tiredbun@akko.wtf
          wrote last edited by
          #20
          @feld @harrysintonen

          DeltaChat's decision of renaming PFS to "reliable deletion" was quite dumb, as it led to at least several people I know thinking they are working on message deletion UX/getting rid of bug with messages not deleting visually on recepient's device, as it's unclear from the name that this is a cryptographic feature.
          feld@friedcheese.usF 2 Replies Last reply
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          • tiredbun@akko.wtfT tiredbun@akko.wtf
            @feld @harrysintonen

            DeltaChat's decision of renaming PFS to "reliable deletion" was quite dumb, as it led to at least several people I know thinking they are working on message deletion UX/getting rid of bug with messages not deleting visually on recepient's device, as it's unclear from the name that this is a cryptographic feature.
            feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
            feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
            feld@friedcheese.us
            wrote last edited by
            #21
            @tiredbun @harrysintonen it's not worse than the terrible PFS naming convention
            tiredbun@akko.wtfT 1 Reply Last reply
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            • tiredbun@akko.wtfT tiredbun@akko.wtf
              @feld @harrysintonen

              DeltaChat's decision of renaming PFS to "reliable deletion" was quite dumb, as it led to at least several people I know thinking they are working on message deletion UX/getting rid of bug with messages not deleting visually on recepient's device, as it's unclear from the name that this is a cryptographic feature.
              feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
              feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
              feld@friedcheese.us
              wrote last edited by
              #22
              @tiredbun @harrysintonen

              > message deletion UX/getting rid of bug with messages not deleting visually on recepient's device

              also is this a reported bug? I've never heard of it and never experienced it. Messages always delete successfully when done manually or with the expiration timer set on a chat.
              1 Reply Last reply
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              • feld@friedcheese.usF feld@friedcheese.us
                @tiredbun @harrysintonen it's not worse than the terrible PFS naming convention
                tiredbun@akko.wtfT This user is from outside of this forum
                tiredbun@akko.wtfT This user is from outside of this forum
                tiredbun@akko.wtf
                wrote last edited by
                #23
                @feld @harrysintonen PFS at least is recognizable by someone who heard of it, which is why I am critical of changing to another name that still causes confusion but this time to everyone, instead of only people that didn't know what is PFS.

                (The bug I only heard in passing by people misunderstanding the announcement, not sure if it's reported)
                feld@friedcheese.usF 1 Reply Last reply
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                • tiredbun@akko.wtfT tiredbun@akko.wtf
                  @feld @harrysintonen PFS at least is recognizable by someone who heard of it, which is why I am critical of changing to another name that still causes confusion but this time to everyone, instead of only people that didn't know what is PFS.

                  (The bug I only heard in passing by people misunderstanding the announcement, not sure if it's reported)
                  feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
                  feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
                  feld@friedcheese.us
                  wrote last edited by
                  #24
                  @tiredbun @harrysintonen but the problem is that nobody actually knows what PFS is except the people who designed it. Everyone uses the terminology wrong. There's so focused on "if someone captures network traffic, they can't decrypt messages with a leaked key" -- but that's only half the story. The entire point is that anything you delete cannot be recovered no matter who captures what. That's why "Reliable Deletion" is a more user-friendly name.

                  And then there's the problem of sometimes it only being called Forward Secrecy instead of Perfect Forward Secrecy...
                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                    @harrysintonen I'd have a different recommendation for the vendor: Stop trying to pretend disappearing messages are a thing.

                    Signal has backups. Revocation from old backups is a very hard problem that they don't even try to store.

                    With the old backup model, each day got a completely new snapshot of all messages and media. If any participant in a chat has backups turned on and doesn't clean out their old backups, disappearing messages are recoverable at an arbitrary point in the future.

                    The newer backup is similar, each day generates a new snapshot of all messages, it's just that they reference media that are backed up separately.

                    And that's assuming everyone is using the official client. But any user using a different client may simply choose not to delete them.

                    I have one chat where I set deleting messages to try to encourage people to write discussions up elsewhere, I wouldn't use it as a security or privacy feature and I think it's quite misleading that Signal pretends that it is either.

                    feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
                    feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
                    feld@friedcheese.us
                    wrote last edited by
                    #25
                    @david_chisnall @harrysintonen

                    Before:

                    "does it have PFS? I can't trust this software if it doesn't have PFS"

                    Now:

                    "well, PFS doesn't actually matter because people can have plaintext backups"

                    We knew this all along but allowed security thought leaders to gain traction and convince the masses otherwise. It's rather disappointing because this is a pattern of behavior between tech folks and their layman audiences.

                    We need to find a way to make the rational voices louder
                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • harrysintonen@infosec.exchangeH harrysintonen@infosec.exchange

                      #Signalapp doesn't actually delete messages when they're deleted (either manually or by automation). The message deletion is written to Write-ahead Log, and the data is only truly deleted once Signal is restarted or threshold of 1000 pages is reached. For macOS Signal application, extra complication arises from the fact that the signal message database can be backed up before the database consolidation occurs. Large amount of the supposedly already deleted messages could be recovered from the device or backups.

                      This concerns use cases where deleting messages actually getting removed in timely manner is of high importance and recovery of the deleted messages could lead to grave consequences.

                      TL;DR: If you don't care about deleted messages being actually deleted you don't need to worry.

                      Full advisory at: https://sintonen.fi/advisories/signal-deleted-but-not-forgotten.txt

                      #fulldisclosure #infosec #cybersecurity

                      cimb4@norden.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                      cimb4@norden.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                      cimb4@norden.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #26

                      @harrysintonen thanks. thanks especially for making this easy to understand for someone who doesn't program or has studied infosec. this is terrible and i am very disappointed in signal. i may research if a different client like molly is somewhat more trustworthy at this point (even if i'm aware a different client cannot fix server side issues)

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • harrysintonen@infosec.exchangeH harrysintonen@infosec.exchange

                        #Signalapp doesn't actually delete messages when they're deleted (either manually or by automation). The message deletion is written to Write-ahead Log, and the data is only truly deleted once Signal is restarted or threshold of 1000 pages is reached. For macOS Signal application, extra complication arises from the fact that the signal message database can be backed up before the database consolidation occurs. Large amount of the supposedly already deleted messages could be recovered from the device or backups.

                        This concerns use cases where deleting messages actually getting removed in timely manner is of high importance and recovery of the deleted messages could lead to grave consequences.

                        TL;DR: If you don't care about deleted messages being actually deleted you don't need to worry.

                        Full advisory at: https://sintonen.fi/advisories/signal-deleted-but-not-forgotten.txt

                        #fulldisclosure #infosec #cybersecurity

                        sertonix@social.treehouse.systemsS This user is from outside of this forum
                        sertonix@social.treehouse.systemsS This user is from outside of this forum
                        sertonix@social.treehouse.systems
                        wrote last edited by
                        #27

                        @harrysintonen

                        Isn't deleting not truly deleting an unavoidable issue due to stuff like cpu caches?

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                        0
                        • groxx@hachyderm.ioG groxx@hachyderm.io

                          @david_chisnall @harrysintonen while obviously true in the sense of "you cannot control information that leaves your hands", there are other purposes for deleting messages, like "protect myself/others if my hardware is stolen". in that kind of scenario you *do* control the data you care about, and choose the app.

                          I do wish it was presented differently though. it's practically a fad at this point, with loads of deeply misleading implementations, and misconceptions from one source get carried over to others 😕

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

                          @groxx
                          The other day I sent my sister a view-once picture on Signal and she took a screenshot of it. What's even the point of that feature? 😕
                          @david_chisnall @harrysintonen

                          yuvalne@433.worldY 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • harrysintonen@infosec.exchangeH harrysintonen@infosec.exchange

                            #Signalapp doesn't actually delete messages when they're deleted (either manually or by automation). The message deletion is written to Write-ahead Log, and the data is only truly deleted once Signal is restarted or threshold of 1000 pages is reached. For macOS Signal application, extra complication arises from the fact that the signal message database can be backed up before the database consolidation occurs. Large amount of the supposedly already deleted messages could be recovered from the device or backups.

                            This concerns use cases where deleting messages actually getting removed in timely manner is of high importance and recovery of the deleted messages could lead to grave consequences.

                            TL;DR: If you don't care about deleted messages being actually deleted you don't need to worry.

                            Full advisory at: https://sintonen.fi/advisories/signal-deleted-but-not-forgotten.txt

                            #fulldisclosure #infosec #cybersecurity

                            mbootsman@toot.reM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mbootsman@toot.reM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mbootsman@toot.re
                            wrote last edited by
                            #29

                            @harrysintonen interesting. Wondering why @signalapp choose for this approach to delete messages.

                            Absolutely loved seeing KENSENTME in the explanation. Leasure Suit Larry brought back to live!

                            kasperd@westergaard.socialK 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • feld@friedcheese.usF feld@friedcheese.us
                              @harrysintonen

                              > This concerns use cases where deleting messages actually getting removed in timely manner is of high importance and recovery of the deleted messages could lead to grave consequences.

                              > TL;DR: If you don't care about deleted messages being actually deleted you don't need to worry.

                              But this is the main selling point of Signal's Perfect Forward Secrecy that everyone says is so important and nobody should use a messenger without it...

                              PFS isn't really about security in the normal sense, it's about the data transmitted being ephemeral and irrecoverable through cryptographic guarantees. That's why DeltaChat's upcoming implementation will not use the PFS terminology but will be called "reliable deletion".

                              So now we have another case of Signal's PFS being broken: first through the iOS notification database not being cleared properly, now through MacOS not actually removing the deleted messages from the database.

                              I think people need to stop trusting Signal's word and start demanding detailed proof that their security promises hold up on every platform.
                              C This user is from outside of this forum
                              C This user is from outside of this forum
                              clacke@libranet.de
                              wrote last edited by
                              #30

                              @feld @harrysintonen Who has been conflating cryptographic guarantees and message deletion?

                              Genuine question; I haven't been following mass media or social media discourse over secure messengers. Has Signal been saying that their disappearing messages are better than those of other messengers because of how they are encrypted in transit?

                              feld@friedcheese.usF 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • C clacke@libranet.de

                                @feld @harrysintonen Who has been conflating cryptographic guarantees and message deletion?

                                Genuine question; I haven't been following mass media or social media discourse over secure messengers. Has Signal been saying that their disappearing messages are better than those of other messengers because of how they are encrypted in transit?

                                feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
                                feld@friedcheese.usF This user is from outside of this forum
                                feld@friedcheese.us
                                wrote last edited by
                                #31
                                @clacke @harrysintonen no, that's just the standard consensus in the security community: PFS is meaningless if you don't also have expiring messages to close the backdoor access to those messages. So it's implied. But nobody wants to look too deeply into how flawed this logic is.

                                First it was push notifications. "We'll encrypt them so Google/Apple can't see them or hand them to the Feds"

                                Okay. But what about the other plaintext traces on the device like the iOS notification database because you still opted to display sensitive information outside control of the app anyway? Oops iOS was a leak...

                                PFS is like protecting a secret you have from spreading. It doesn't work if you involve too many people. Signal's centralization is pretty important for ratcheting to support it in large groups IIRC. But you can't know if someone in the group is breaking the trust through backups or if they're a mole anyway. You have to keep the group as small as possible and it should be people you know and can trust for this to work right. You need careful coordination to manage and guard the secret information properly. This doesn't work for the general public. PFS makes promises it can't deliver if your design allows any leaks. This means:

                                - no notifications can expose anything about the contents of the messages
                                - backups should never be allowed
                                - software needs to do extra work to ensure deletion events are handled carefully and all traces of the original data are scrubbed everywhere

                                Signal didn't want to do the first two and failed at the third

                                But security thought leaders have convinced their security-conscious laymen followers that PFS has more importance than those three items, when those are highly likely attack vectors and capture-and-decrypt-later attacks are basically a myth.

                                If Signal did those three and had no PFS it would be more secure than it is now...
                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • nunesgh@mastodon.socialN nunesgh@mastodon.social

                                  @groxx
                                  The other day I sent my sister a view-once picture on Signal and she took a screenshot of it. What's even the point of that feature? 😕
                                  @david_chisnall @harrysintonen

                                  yuvalne@433.worldY This user is from outside of this forum
                                  yuvalne@433.worldY This user is from outside of this forum
                                  yuvalne@433.world
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #32

                                  @nunesgh @groxx @david_chisnall @harrysintonen the argument against screenshot blocking is that it's not hard to overcome and enabling it will create a false sense of security.
                                  most people i know use those pictures as a gentle "this is not for sharing" reminder. for example (real-life one), a friend asking if a new bra looks good on them. it's a matter of trust.

                                  yuvalne@433.worldY 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                                    @harrysintonen I'd have a different recommendation for the vendor: Stop trying to pretend disappearing messages are a thing.

                                    Signal has backups. Revocation from old backups is a very hard problem that they don't even try to store.

                                    With the old backup model, each day got a completely new snapshot of all messages and media. If any participant in a chat has backups turned on and doesn't clean out their old backups, disappearing messages are recoverable at an arbitrary point in the future.

                                    The newer backup is similar, each day generates a new snapshot of all messages, it's just that they reference media that are backed up separately.

                                    And that's assuming everyone is using the official client. But any user using a different client may simply choose not to delete them.

                                    I have one chat where I set deleting messages to try to encourage people to write discussions up elsewhere, I wouldn't use it as a security or privacy feature and I think it's quite misleading that Signal pretends that it is either.

                                    yuvalne@433.worldY This user is from outside of this forum
                                    yuvalne@433.worldY This user is from outside of this forum
                                    yuvalne@433.world
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #33

                                    @david_chisnall @harrysintonen to be fair, if you read what Signal writes about disappearing messages, they're presented as a cleanup tool, and deliberately not as a security tool.
                                    https://support.signal.org/hc/en-us/articles/360007320771-Set-and-manage-disappearing-messages

                                    tamzin@wikis.worldT 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • yuvalne@433.worldY yuvalne@433.world

                                      @nunesgh @groxx @david_chisnall @harrysintonen the argument against screenshot blocking is that it's not hard to overcome and enabling it will create a false sense of security.
                                      most people i know use those pictures as a gentle "this is not for sharing" reminder. for example (real-life one), a friend asking if a new bra looks good on them. it's a matter of trust.

                                      yuvalne@433.worldY This user is from outside of this forum
                                      yuvalne@433.worldY This user is from outside of this forum
                                      yuvalne@433.world
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #34

                                      @nunesgh @groxx @david_chisnall @harrysintonen to be clear, if there were a good way to do screenshot blocking i'd be in favour of such a feature. i'm just not convinced that such a way exists.

                                      tamzin@wikis.worldT nunesgh@mastodon.socialN dirtside@phpc.socialD 3 Replies Last reply
                                      0
                                      • yuvalne@433.worldY yuvalne@433.world

                                        @nunesgh @groxx @david_chisnall @harrysintonen to be clear, if there were a good way to do screenshot blocking i'd be in favour of such a feature. i'm just not convinced that such a way exists.

                                        tamzin@wikis.worldT This user is from outside of this forum
                                        tamzin@wikis.worldT This user is from outside of this forum
                                        tamzin@wikis.world
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #35

                                        @Yuvalne @nunesgh @groxx @david_chisnall @harrysintonen Yeah, Signal's screenshot-blocking has always struck me as dangerous. If I only used it on desktop on Windows (where it does block screenshots), I'd assume everyone else was blocked from screenshotting lik eme. Yet on my Android phone or on the Linux VM on my Chromebook, I can screenshot things just fine. It's also just inconsistent UX, for no clear reason, given that at least on Android you *can* block screenshots.

                                        yuvalne@433.worldY 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • tamzin@wikis.worldT tamzin@wikis.world

                                          @Yuvalne @nunesgh @groxx @david_chisnall @harrysintonen Yeah, Signal's screenshot-blocking has always struck me as dangerous. If I only used it on desktop on Windows (where it does block screenshots), I'd assume everyone else was blocked from screenshotting lik eme. Yet on my Android phone or on the Linux VM on my Chromebook, I can screenshot things just fine. It's also just inconsistent UX, for no clear reason, given that at least on Android you *can* block screenshots.

                                          yuvalne@433.worldY This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          yuvalne@433.world
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #36

                                          @tamzin @nunesgh @groxx @david_chisnall @harrysintonen Signal offers screenshot blocking *on your device*, the same way it offers incognito keyboard mode on your device. the assumption for those two is that you aren't trying to overcome privacy measures put there by yourself, not that you can force them on anyone else.

                                          yuvalne@433.worldY 1 Reply Last reply
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