Sunday, 21 January 2024

Stop Using MD-5, Now!

TL;DR: Don't use MD-5 to identify malware samples. Believe me, it is a bad idea. Use SHA-256 or a stronger hash function.

This post is dedicated to all malware researchers, still using MD-5 to identify malware samples.

Before deep-diving into the details, let me explain my view on this topic. Whenever you want to identify a malware, it is only OK to publish the MD-5 hash of the malware if you post at least the SHA-256 hash of the malware as well. Publishing only the MD-5 hash is unprofessional. If you want to understand why, please continue reading. If you know about the problem, but want to help me spread the word, please link to my site www.stopusingmd5now.com.

By writing articles/posts/etc. and publishing the MD-5 hash only, it is the lesser problem that you show people your incompetency about hash functions, but you also teach other people to use MD-5. And it spreads like a disease... Last but not least, if I find a sample on your blog post, and you use MD-5 only, I can't be sure we have the same sample.

Here is a list to name a few bad examples (order is in Google search rank order):


Introduction to (cryptographic) hash functions

A long time ago (according to some sources since 1970) people started designing hash functions, for an awful lot of different reasons. It can be used for file integrity verification, password verification, pseudo-random generation, etc. But one of the most important properties of a cryptographic hash function is that it can "uniquely" identify a block of data with a small, fixed bit string. E.g., malware can be identified by using only the hash itself, so everybody who has the same malware sample will have the same hash; thus they can refer to the malware by the hash itself.

It is easy to conclude that there will always be collisions, where a different block of data has the same result hashes. The domain (block of data) is infinite, while the codomain (possible hash values) is finite. The question is how easy it is to find two different blocks of data, having the same hash. Mathematicians call this property "collision resistance." Proper cryptographic hash functions are collision-resistant, meaning it is impractical or impossible to find two different blocks of data, which have the same hash.

In 1989 Ronald Rivest (the first letter in the abbreviation of the RSA algorithm) designed the MD-2 hashing algorithm. Since 1997 there are publications about that this hashing algorithm is far from perfect.

In 1990 Ronald Rivest designed the MD-4 algorithm, which is considered as broken at least from 1991. But MD-4 is still in use from Windows XP until Windows 8 in the password protocol (NTLM). Unfortunately, there are more significant problems with NTLM besides using MD-4, but this can be the topic of a different blog post.

In 1991 (you might guess who) designed yet another hashing algorithm called MD-5, to replace MD-4  (because of the known weaknesses). But again, in from 1993 it has been shown many times that MD-5 is broken as well. According to Wikipedia, "On 18 March 2006, Klima published an algorithm [17] that can find a collision within one minute on a single notebook computer, using a method he calls tunneling". This means, that with the 8 years old computing power of a single notebook one can create two different files having the same MD-5 hash. But the algorithms to generate collisions have been improved since, and "a 2013 attack by Xie Tao, Fanbao Liu, and Dengguo Feng breaks MD-5 collision resistance in 2^18 time. This attack runs in less than a second on a regular computer." The key takeaway here is that it is pretty damn hard to design a secure cryptographic hash function, which is fast, but still safe. I bet that if I would develop a hash function, Ron would be able to hack it in minutes.

Now, dear malware researcher, consider the following scenario. You as, a malware analyst, find a new binary sample. You calculate the MD-5 hash of the malware, and Google for that hash. You see this hash value on other malware researchers or on a sandbox/vendor's site. This site concludes that this sample does this or that, and is either malicious or not. Either because the site is also relying solely on MD-5 or because you have only checked the MD-5 and the researcher or sandbox has a good reputation, you move on and forget this binary. But in reality, it is possible that your binary is totally different than the one analyzed by others. The results of this mistake can scale from nothing to catastrophic.

If you don't believe me, just check the hello.exe and erase.exe on this site from Peter Sellinger. Same MD-5, different binaries; a harmless and a (fake) malicious one... And you can do the same easily at home. No supercomputers,  no NSA magic needed.

On a side-note, it is important to mention that even today it can be hard to find a block of data (in generic), if only the MD-5 hash is known ("pre image resistance"). I have heard people arguing this when I told them using MD-5 as a password hash function is a bad idea. The main problem with MD-5 as a password hash is not the weaknesses in MD-5 itself, but the lack of salt, lack of iterations, and lack of memory hardness. But still, I don't see any reason why you should use MD-5 as a building block for anything, which has anything to do with security. Would you use a car to drive your children to the school, which car has not been maintained in the last 23 year? If your answer is yes, you should neither have children nor a job in IT SEC.

Conclusion

If you are a malware researcher, and used MD-5 only to identify malware samples in the past, I suggest to write it down 1000 times: "I promise I won't use MD-5 to identify malware in the future."

I even made a website dedicated to this problem, www.stopusingmd5now.com . The next time you see a post/article/whatever where malware is identified by the MD-5 hash only, please link to this blog post or website, and the world will be a better and more professional place.


PS: If you are a forensics investigator, or software developer developing software used in forensics, the same applies to you.
PS 2: If you find this post too provocative and harsh, there is a reason for this ...

Update: I have modified two malware (Citadel, Atrax) with the help of HashClash, and now those have the same MD-5. Many thanks for Marc Stevens for his research, publishing his code, and help given during the collision finding.More info
  1. Pentest Recon Tools
  2. Pentest Tools Kali Linux
  3. Pentest Tools For Windows
  4. Hacking Tools Free Download
  5. Hack App
  6. Hacker Tools For Windows
  7. Tools 4 Hack
  8. Pentest Tools Alternative
  9. Pentest Reporting Tools
  10. Hackers Toolbox
  11. Growth Hacker Tools
  12. Hack App
  13. Hacking Tools For Mac
  14. Hacker Tools Hardware
  15. Easy Hack Tools
  16. Underground Hacker Sites
  17. Hacker
  18. Pentest Tools Review
  19. Pentest Tools Bluekeep
  20. Growth Hacker Tools
  21. Pentest Automation Tools
  22. New Hack Tools
  23. Hacking Tools Software
  24. Hacker Tools 2020
  25. Hack Tools
  26. Hack Apps
  27. Hacking Tools Usb
  28. Usb Pentest Tools
  29. Black Hat Hacker Tools
  30. Hack Tools
  31. Tools For Hacker
  32. Hacking Tools Online
  33. Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
  34. Hacker
  35. Pentest Tools For Ubuntu
  36. Hacker Tools Mac
  37. Hak5 Tools
  38. Pentest Tools For Android
  39. Physical Pentest Tools
  40. Pentest Tools For Android
  41. Hacking Tools For Games
  42. Pentest Tools Open Source
  43. Hack Tools
  44. Hack Tools For Games
  45. World No 1 Hacker Software
  46. Ethical Hacker Tools
  47. Hack Tools For Mac
  48. Hackers Toolbox
  49. Pentest Tools Github
  50. Pentest Reporting Tools
  51. Hack Tools For Games
  52. Hacker Tools 2019
  53. Pentest Box Tools Download
  54. Hack Website Online Tool
  55. Tools Used For Hacking
  56. Hacking Tools Pc
  57. Pentest Recon Tools
  58. Growth Hacker Tools
  59. Best Pentesting Tools 2018
  60. Hacking Tools For Windows Free Download
  61. Tools For Hacker
  62. Pentest Tools For Android
  63. Hack Tool Apk
  64. Top Pentest Tools
  65. Easy Hack Tools
  66. Hacker Techniques Tools And Incident Handling
  67. Hacking Tools For Games
  68. Hacker Search Tools
  69. Hack Website Online Tool
  70. Hacker Search Tools
  71. Nsa Hacker Tools
  72. Hack Apps
  73. Hak5 Tools

0 comments:

Post a Comment