Use of Password Hash Instead of Password for Authentication

Incomplete Base
Structure: Simple
Description

The product records password hashes in a data store, receives a hash of a password from a client, and compares the supplied hash to the hash obtained from the data store.

Extended Description

Some authentication mechanisms rely on the client to generate the hash for a password, possibly to reduce load on the server or avoid sending the password across the network. However, when the client is used to generate the hash, an attacker can bypass the authentication by obtaining a copy of the hash, e.g. by using SQL injection to compromise a database of authentication credentials, or by exploiting an information exposure. The attacker could then use a modified client to replay the stolen hash without having knowledge of the original password. As a result, the server-side comparison against a client-side hash does not provide any more security than the use of passwords without hashing.

Common Consequences 1
Scope: Access Control

Impact: Bypass Protection MechanismGain Privileges or Assume Identity

An attacker could bypass the authentication routine without knowing the original password.

Observed Examples 2
CVE-2009-1283Product performs authentication with user-supplied password hashes that can be obtained from a separate SQL injection vulnerability (CVE-2009-1282).
CVE-2005-3435Product allows attackers to bypass authentication by obtaining the password hash for another user and specifying the hash in the pwd argument.
Applicable Platforms
Languages:
Not Language-Specific : Undetermined
Modes of Introduction
Implementation