
From secnotif@MICROSOFT.COM Fri Sep 10 23:00:58 1999
From: Microsoft Product Security <secnotif@MICROSOFT.COM>
Resent-From: mea culpa <jericho@dimensional.com>
To: MICROSOFT_SECURITY@ANNOUNCE.MICROSOFT.COM
Resent-To: jericho@attrition.org
Date: Fri, 10 Sep 1999 15:50:32 -0700
Subject: Microsoft Security Bulletin (MS99-035)

The following is a Security  Bulletin from the Microsoft Product Security
Notification Service.

Please do not  reply to this message,  as it was sent  from an unattended
mailbox.
                    ********************************

Microsoft Security Bulletin (MS99-035)
--------------------------------------

Patch Available for "Set Cookie Header Caching" Vulnerability
Originally Posted: September 10, 1999

Summary
=======
Microsoft has released a patch that eliminates a vulnerability in
Microsoft(r) Site Server(r) and Microsoft Commercial Internet System(r)
(MCIS). The vulnerability could allow a web site visitor to inadvertently
access another customer's data, if their Internet gateway caches web pages
via a proxy server and the web site authenticates based on a GUID.

Frequently asked questions regarding this vulnerability can be found
at http://www.microsoft.com/security/bulletins/MS99-035faq.asp

Issue
=====
When certain versions of Site Server or MCIS send a web page that contains a
Set Cookie Header, they do not flag the page with an expiration header. As a
result, such pages may be cached by a web proxy. Multiple customers
accessing the same site via a web proxy might be served the same page,
containing the same Set Cookie Header. If the cookie information includes a
GUID that is used as an index for the server's database, one customer's
personal data might be viewable by the others.

When GUIDs are issued to new clients as part of the authentication process,
they can be presumed to be unique. However, they cannot be presumed to be
secret. The patch eliminates the specific vulnerability at hand, but other
attacks are possible whenever authentication is based solely on information
contained in cookies. Sites that follow security best practices, such as
turning off automatic cookie authentication, would not be affected by this
vulnerability.

Affected Software Versions
==========================
 - Microsoft Site Server 3.0
 - Microsoft Site Server 3.0 Commerce Edition
 - Microsoft Commercial Internet System 2.0 and 2.5

Patch Availability
==================
 - ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/bussys/sitesrv/sitesrv-public/
   fixes/usa/siteserver3/Hotfixes-PostSP2/ProxyCache/

   NOTE: Line breaks have been inserted into the above URL for readability

More Information
================
Please see the following references for more information related to this
issue.
 - Microsoft Security Bulletin MS99-035: Frequently Asked Questions,
   http://www.microsoft.com/security/bulletins/MS99-035faq.asp.
 - Microsoft Knowledge Base (KB) article Q238647,
   Proxy Caching Can Cause Multiple Clients to Receive the Same GUID,
   http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q238/6/47.asp.
   (Note: It may take 24 hours from the original posting of this
   bulletin for the KB article to be visible.)
 - Microsoft Security Advisor web site,
   http://www.microsoft.com/security/default.asp.

Obtaining Support on this Issue
===============================
This is a fully supported patch. Information on contacting Microsoft
Technical Support is available at
http://support.microsoft.com/support/contact/default.asp.

Revisions
=========
 - September 10, 1999: Bulletin Created.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

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