CWE-1273: Device Unlock Credential Sharing

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Description

The credentials necessary for unlocking a device are shared across multiple parties and may expose sensitive information.

Extended Description

"Unlocking a device" often means activating certain unadvertised debug and manufacturer-specific capabilities of a device using sensitive credentials. Unlocking a device might be necessary for the purpose of troubleshooting device problems. For example, suppose a device contains the ability to dump the content of the full system memory by disabling the memory-protection mechanisms. Since this is a highly security-sensitive capability, this capability is "locked" in the production part. Unless the device gets unlocked by supplying the proper credentials, the debug capabilities are not available. For cases where the chip designer, chip manufacturer (fabricator), and manufacturing and assembly testers are all employed by the same company, the risk of compromise of the credentials is greatly reduced. However, the risk is greater when the chip designer is employed by one company, the chip manufacturer is employed by another company (a foundry), and the assemblers and testers are employed by yet a third company. Since these different companies will need to perform various tests on the device to verify correct device function, they all need to share the unlock key. Unfortunately, the level of secrecy and policy might be quite different at each company, greatly increasing the risk of sensitive credentials being compromised.


ThreatScore

Threat Mapped score: 3.0

Industry: Finiancial

Threat priority: P2 - Serious (High)


Observed Examples (CVEs)

Related Attack Patterns (CAPEC)


Attack TTPs

Malware

APTs (Intrusion Sets)

Modes of Introduction

Phase Note
Integration N/A
Manufacturing N/A

Common Consequences

Potential Mitigations

Applicable Platforms


Demonstrative Examples

Intro: This example shows how an attacker can take advantage of compromised credentials.

Body: When the credentials of multiple organizations are stored together, exposure to third parties occurs frequently.

Suppose a semiconductor chipmaker, "C", uses the foundry "F" for fabricating its chips. Now, F has many other customers in addition to C, and some of the other customers are much smaller companies. F has dedicated teams for each of its customers, but somehow it mixes up the unlock credentials and sends the unlock credentials of C to the wrong team. This other team does not take adequate precautions to protect the credentials that have nothing to do with them, and eventually the unlock credentials of C get leaked.

Notes

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