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Description

The software does not check the revocation status of a certificate after its initial revocation check, which can cause the software to perform privileged actions even after the certificate is revoked at a later time.

If the revocation status of a certificate is not checked before each action that requires privileges, the system may be subject to a race condition. If a certificate is revoked after the initial check, all subsequent actions taken with the owner of the revoked certificate will lose all benefits guaranteed by the certificate. In fact, it is almost certain that the use of a revoked certificate indicates malicious activity.

Modes of Introduction:

– Architecture and Design

 

Likelihood of Exploit: Medium

 

Related Weaknesses

CWE-299
CWE-296
CWE-297
CWE-298

 

Consequences

Access Control: Gain Privileges or Assume Identity

Trust may be assigned to an entity who is not who it claims to be.

Integrity: Modify Application Data

Data from an untrusted (and possibly malicious) source may be integrated.

Confidentiality: Read Application Data

Data may be disclosed to an entity impersonating a trusted entity, resulting in information disclosure.

 

Potential Mitigations

Phase: Architecture and Design

Description: 

Ensure that certificates are checked for revoked status before each use of a protected resource. If the certificate is checked before each access of a protected resource, the delay subject to a possible race condition becomes almost negligible and significantly reduces the risk associated with this issue.

CVE References