- Charity site payments - secure or not ?
- Posted by Kev on April 1st, 2006
I wanted to donate to a well established and reputable charity using a
credit card. I'll not mention the name of the organisation for obvious
reasons.
The problem seems to be that although there is a VeriSign logo on the pages,
the connection in both IE6 and FireFox 1.5 seems to be a pure HTTP
connection and not an HTTPS one. This is reflected in the address bar and
there is no padlock.
This is true on the page where you enter the amount and also on the page
where you enter the actual card details.
As far as I can tell, this means that the card details would be routed
across the internet in an unencrypted format.
I've raised this with the organisation who passed it onto the hosting
company. This is what they had to say :
"There are multiple ways to donate as instructed on the page. You can send
him an email back saying your web hosting company, XXXXXXXXX, does not host
Verisign's online forms. That first page is on our servers (he mentions
http://www.xxxxxxxxx.org/donate.html ), after that it goes to VeriSign. If
he would place an amount in and continue, he would know. We can add some
text that says something along these lines. Please let me know."
If you enter an amount and click the Donate button it takes you to the
payment page - which is not showing as HTTPS. Clicking on the VeriSign logo
shows the following text :
"Encrypted Data Transmission This Web site can secure your private
information using a VeriSign SSL Certificate. Information exchanged with any
address beginning with https is encrypted using SSL before transmission.
Identity Verified VERISIGN, INC. has been verified as the owner or
operator of the Web site located at payments.verisign.com. Official records
confirm VERISIGN, INC. as a valid business."
What does anyone think about this ? You reasoning would be good to see as I
intend to pass the comments back to the organisation.
Thanks
- Posted by Adam W. Montville on April 1st, 2006
Kev wrote:
You picked up on the first hint that the page isn't secure.
Again, this is a big clue. Don't enter your information on these sites.
The charity (or any organization) needs to ensure that the site is
communicating to you that it's secure.
That's a perfect assumption.
This arrangement does not make for good security. We security
professionals are trying to raise Information Security awareness and
when service providers come up with a solution that counters our
efforts, we all lose.
The proper way to implement this solution is to have the information
gathering page be secured -- the form itself, not just the submission of
the form.
This sort of thing is really starting to be a problem. There are still
banks who send out legitimate e-mails requesting users to click on a
link. This is what makes phishers successful -- legitimate companies
legitimizing a method of usability that the bad guy can then exploit.
It sounds like they've got implementation problems.
I think you've answered your own question. If you still want to donate
to the company, do so in the old fashioned way -- pay by check via snail
mail.
--
*Adam W. Montville, CISSP*
awm@montvillearchives.net <mailto:awm@montvillearchives.net>
*http://www.MontvilleArchives.net <http://www.MontvilleArchives.net>*
*ICQ: 271-685-874*
- Posted by Kev on April 1st, 2006
<snip>
Thanks Adam. We clearly agree on this.
Now I can tell the organisation that I'm not a lone voice and that despite
what the hosting company has advised, several people have the view that the
card payments are indeed insecure.
Would anyone else care to comment ?
Thanks
- Posted by Craig A. Finseth on April 3rd, 2006
In article <FpmdnRjt5rC42bPZRVnyuQ@bt.com>, Kev <nospam@nospam.com> wrote:
...
You are correct: the session isn't encrypted.
So, assuming that you are on dialup or DSL, this means that you aren't
protected in the _least_ likely place to expose your information. If
you are on cable, using wireless, or coming in from a public place,
this is somewhat more exposure here.
The real place to worry is in the charity's database and backend
processors. These are much more tempting targets and much more likely
to be implemented in an insecure fashion. They are also the same
systems that are used no matter how you make the donations. (:-(
You can always send them a check.
Craig
- Posted by Adam W. Montville on April 4th, 2006
Craig A. Finseth wrote:
Kev, Craig makes a great point!
--
*Adam W. Montville, CISSP*
awm@montvillearchives.net <mailto:awm@montvillearchives.net>
*http://www.MontvilleArchives.net <http://www.MontvilleArchives.net>*
*ICQ: 271-685-874*
- Posted by Kev on April 4th, 2006
"Adam W. Montville" <awm@montvillearchives.net> wrote in message
news:e0smef$nk6$1@emma.aioe.org...
True - he does. But I'm being public spirited in multiple ways ! When
people have enquired about it being secure they always say that it is
protected by VeriSign ! The three of us get the distinct impression that it
is not.
- Posted by Art on April 4th, 2006
On Mon, 03 Apr 2006 11:59:30 -0000, Craig A. Finseth
<news@finseth.com> wrote:
Hmmm--how secure is a paper check these days? Not counting the small
number of mailed checks that never get delivered--were they stolen?
destroyed? piling up in some demented postal worker's garage?--any
person you pay with a check can use the routing and account numbers to
make online electronic fund transfers from your account. In fact,
many large businesses are already doing exactly that, legitimately,
when they receive a check--for instance my local electric utility and
credit card companies. They covert it to electronic transfer so they
can credit the funds the same or next day, no kiting possible.
Plus--if you make any sort of online payment from your checking
account, there's probably no way for your bank OR the payee to confirm
that (a) it's really your checking account or (b) it's really you
making the withdrawal. The bank transfers the money automatically and
payee collects the money automatically, no questions asked.
Seems to me online payment by credit card at least lets you see your
credit card statement before paying it and catch fraudulent
transactions. With a checking account the money just gone.
- Posted by Adam W. Montville on April 6th, 2006
Art wrote:
All points well taken. I've seen recommendations on www.fool.com
(financial advice, really great site -- if you've not been there, I
highly recommend it) that indicate you should have one or two low-limit
credit cards.
1. You're only going to be liable for $50 maximum on fraudulent
transactions.
2. Criminals won't get too much out of it.
One thing is for certain: in today's electronic age financial
transactions not performed in person and with cash have downside risk.
--
*Adam W. Montville, CISSP*
awm@montvillearchives.net <mailto:awm@montvillearchives.net>
*http://www.MontvilleArchives.net <http://www.MontvilleArchives.net>*
*ICQ: 271-685-874*