TY - GEN
T1 - Time Does Not Heal All Wounds
T2 - 26th Annual Network and Distributed System Security Symposium, NDSS 2019
AU - Luo, Meng
AU - Laperdrix, Pierre
AU - Honarmand, Nima
AU - Nikiforakis, Nick
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© NDSS 2019.All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Recent market share statistics show that mobile device traffic has overtaken that of traditional desktop computers. Users spend an increasing amount of time on their smartphones and tablets, while the web continues to be the platform of choice for delivering new applications to users. In this environment, it is necessary for web applications to utilize all the tools at their disposal to protect mobile users against popular web application attacks. In this paper, we perform the first study of the support of popular web-application security mechanisms (such as the Content-Security Policy, HTTP Strict Transport Security, and Referrer Policy) across mobile browsers. We design 395 individual tests covering 8 different security mechanisms, and utilize them to evaluate the security-mechanism support in the 20 most popular browser families on Android. Moreover, by collecting and testing browser versions from the last seven years, we evaluate a total of 351 unique browser versions against the aforementioned tests, collecting more than 138K test results. By analyzing these results, we find that, although mobile browsers generally support more security mechanisms over time, not all browsers evolve in the same way. We discover popular browsers, with millions of downloads, which do not support the majority of the tested mechanisms, and identify design choices, followed by the majority of browsers, which leave hundreds of popular websites open to clickjacking attacks. Moreover, we discover the presence of multi-year vulnerability windows between the time when popular websites start utilizing a security mechanism and when mobile browsers enforce it. Our findings highlight the need for continuous security testing of mobile web browsers, as well as server-side frameworks which can adapt to the level of security that each browser can guarantee.
AB - Recent market share statistics show that mobile device traffic has overtaken that of traditional desktop computers. Users spend an increasing amount of time on their smartphones and tablets, while the web continues to be the platform of choice for delivering new applications to users. In this environment, it is necessary for web applications to utilize all the tools at their disposal to protect mobile users against popular web application attacks. In this paper, we perform the first study of the support of popular web-application security mechanisms (such as the Content-Security Policy, HTTP Strict Transport Security, and Referrer Policy) across mobile browsers. We design 395 individual tests covering 8 different security mechanisms, and utilize them to evaluate the security-mechanism support in the 20 most popular browser families on Android. Moreover, by collecting and testing browser versions from the last seven years, we evaluate a total of 351 unique browser versions against the aforementioned tests, collecting more than 138K test results. By analyzing these results, we find that, although mobile browsers generally support more security mechanisms over time, not all browsers evolve in the same way. We discover popular browsers, with millions of downloads, which do not support the majority of the tested mechanisms, and identify design choices, followed by the majority of browsers, which leave hundreds of popular websites open to clickjacking attacks. Moreover, we discover the presence of multi-year vulnerability windows between the time when popular websites start utilizing a security mechanism and when mobile browsers enforce it. Our findings highlight the need for continuous security testing of mobile web browsers, as well as server-side frameworks which can adapt to the level of security that each browser can guarantee.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85069963880
U2 - 10.14722/ndss.2019.23149
DO - 10.14722/ndss.2019.23149
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85069963880
T3 - 26th Annual Network and Distributed System Security Symposium, NDSS 2019
BT - 26th Annual Network and Distributed System Security Symposium, NDSS 2019
PB - The Internet Society
Y2 - 24 February 2019 through 27 February 2019
ER -