this post was submitted on 11 Jan 2024
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Another thought I had was regarding interception. Anyone with access to root cert can decrypt the data. My understanding was that these certs were supposed to be counter signing right?
Otherwise, wouldnt any government implementing this just be conducting zero effort surveillance?
Not directly no, but it could be combined with other attacks to potentially decrypt your data. Maybe.
The root certificates are used for the primary proof that the server you're talking to is the server it claims to be. It's not the only protection so just this alone wouldn't generally be enough to decrypt anything. Also if your traffic does go to the correct server... then having the root certificate doesn't allow them to decrypt it.
It's a complex system and difficult to explain all of it, you really just need to learn how every step of the process works and also how each one can be compromised, to fully understand any of this.
I setup our transparent proxy so we can do interception and IPS. I'm interested/concerned about the ability to use an intermediate ca cert downstream inline somewhere (like a teoco) and if regular consumer desktops would alert on that since their browser would trust the root. We GPO place our intermediate cert in the Windows trusted intermediates. I can't remember if browsing breaks without doing that.
Not really a concern if there's other certs/TLS required.in addition to the QWACs cert thought.
I got the impression the easier threat/worry was compromise of a nation CA and issuing illicit duplicate site certs, to then spoof a bank site. Still requires traffic redirection with DNS or routing though I think.