ct-woodpecker
certspotter
ct-woodpecker | certspotter | |
---|---|---|
1 | 4 | |
173 | 918 | |
3.5% | 1.1% | |
3.6 | 6.9 | |
10 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Go | Go | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
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ct-woodpecker
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I looked through attacks in my access logs. Here's what I found
Was looking into Certificate Transparency logs recently. Are there any convenient tools/methods for querying CT logs? i.e. search for domains within a timeframe
Cloudflare’s Merkle Town[0] is useful for getting overviews, but I haven’t found an easy way to query CT logs. ct-woodpecker[1] seems promising, too
[0] https://ct.cloudflare.com/
[1] https://github.com/letsencrypt/ct-woodpecker
certspotter
- SSLMate/Certspotter: Certificate Transparency Log Monitor
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Last Chance to Fix EIDAS (Mozilla)
> 1. Is this proactively monitored for? And how? And by whom?
Yes, security researchers and domain owners use Certificate Transparency Monitors to search for certificates. e.g.:
https://crt.sh/ - allows you to search for certificates for a domain
https://github.com/SSLMate/certspotter/ - open source tool which notifies you when a certificate is issued for one of your domains
https://sslmate.com/certspotter/ - commercial service that does the same, operated by my company
> 2. If a major state-level CA was discovered to have issued a mitm cert, would browser vendors really take the commercial hit of removing or distrusting their root cert?
In 2017, Chrome and Firefox distrusted Symantec, which was at the time the world's largest certificate authority: https://security.googleblog.com/2017/09/chromes-plan-to-dist...
Symantec hadn't even issued MitM certs - they were just grossly incompetent. Distrusting them was very painful, but necessary to upload the integrity of the CA system, and demonstrated conclusively that there is no such thing as a too-big-to-fail CA.
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Encrypted traffic interception on Hetzner and Linode targeting Jabber service
Indeed, a CT monitor which sends alerts about legitimate certificates is pretty much useless due to noise. My service, Cert Spotter, provides an API endpoint[1] which you can upload your CSRs to, so you don't get alerted about certificates using the same key as the CSR. The open source version of Cert Spotter can invoke a script[2] when a certificate is discovered, and the script can cross reference against a list of legitimate certs.
[1] https://sslmate.com/help/reference/certspotter_authorization...
[2] https://github.com/SSLMate/certspotter/blob/master/man/certs...
- Google's Certificate Transparency Search page to be discontinued May 15th, 2022
What are some alternatives?
certificates - 🛡️ A private certificate authority (X.509 & SSH) & ACME server for secure automated certificate management, so you can use TLS everywhere & SSO for SSH.
osv.dev - Open source vulnerability DB and triage service.
check_ssl_cert - A shell script (that can be used as a Nagios/Icinga plugin) to check an SSL/TLS connection.
acmetool - :lock: acmetool, an automatic certificate acquisition tool for ACME (Let's Encrypt)
rap - Raspberry Pi RIPE Atlas Probe
certificate-transparency-go - Auditing for TLS certificates (Go code)