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Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:561# Chrome Security FAQ
2
3[TOC]
4
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:345## Process
6
7<a name="TOC-Which-bugs-are-valid-for-rewards-under-the-Chrome-Vulnerability-Rewards-program-"></a>
8### Which bugs are valid for rewards under the Chrome Vulnerability Rewards program?
9
10Please see [the VRP FAQ page](vrp-faq.md).
11
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:5612<a name="TOC-Why-are-security-bugs-hidden-in-the-Chromium-issue-tracker-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:3413### Why are security bugs hidden in the Chromium issue tracker?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:5614
15We must balance a commitment to openness with a commitment to avoiding
16unnecessary risk for users of widely-used open source libraries.
17
18<a name="TOC-Can-you-please-un-hide-old-security-bugs-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:3419### Can you please un-hide old security bugs?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:5620
21Our goal is to open security bugs to the public once the bug is fixed and the
22fix has been shipped to a majority of users. However, many vulnerabilities
23affect products besides Chromium, and we don’t want to put users of those
24products unnecessarily at risk by opening the bug before fixes for the other
25affected products have shipped.
26
27Therefore, we make all security bugs public within approximately 14 weeks of the
28fix landing in the Chromium repository. The exception to this is in the event of
29the bug reporter or some other responsible party explicitly requesting anonymity
30or protection against disclosing other particularly sensitive data included in
31the vulnerability report (e.g. username and password pairs).
32
33<a name="TOC-Can-I-get-advance-notice-about-security-bugs-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:3434### Can I get advance notice about security bugs?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:5635
36Vendors of products based on Chromium, distributors of operating systems that
37bundle Chromium, and individuals and organizations that significantly contribute
38to fixing security bugs can be added to a list for earlier access to these bugs.
39You can email us at [email protected] to request to join the list if you
40meet the above criteria. In particular, vendors of anti-malware, IDS/IPS,
41vulnerability risk assessment, and similar products or services do not meet this
42bar.
43
44Please note that the safest version of Chrome/Chromium is always the latest
45stable version — there is no good reason to wait to upgrade, so enterprise
46deployments should always track the latest stable release. When you do this,
47there is no need to further assess the risk of Chromium vulnerabilities: we
48strive to fix vulnerabilities quickly and release often.
49
Alex Goughccfbbb52023-05-16 14:42:1950<a name="TOC-How-can-I-know-which-fixes-to-include-in-my-downstream-project-"></a>
Alex Goughc9ab81fd2023-05-15 19:03:1451### How can I know which fixes to include in my downstream project?
52
53Chrome is built with mitigations and hardening which aim to prevent or reduce
54the impact of security issues. We classify bugs as security issues if they are
55known to affect a version and configuration of Chrome that we ship to the
56public. Some classes of bug might present as security issues if Chrome was
57compiled with different flags, or linked against a different C++ standard
58library, but do not with the toolchain and configuration that we use to build
59Chrome. We discuss some of these cases elsewhere in this FAQ.
60
61If we become aware of them, these issues may be triaged as `Type=Bug-Security,
62Security_Impact=None` or as `Type=Bug` because they do not affect the production
63version of Chrome. They may or may not be immediately visible to the public in
64the bug tracker, and may or may not be identified as security issues. If fixes
65are landed, they may or may not be merged from HEAD to a release branch. Chrome
66will only label, fix and merge security issues in Chrome, but attackers can
67still analyze public issues, or commits in the Chromium project to identify bugs
68that might be exploitable in other contexts.
69
70Chromium embedders and other downstream projects may build with different
71compilers, compile options, target operating systems, standard library, or
72additional software components. It is possible that some issues Chrome
73classifies as functional issues will manifest as security issues in a product
74embedding Chromium - it is the responsibility of any such project to understand
75what code they are shipping, and how it is compiled. We recommend using Chrome's
76[configuration](https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:build/config/)
77whenever possible.
78
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:5679<a name="TOC-Can-I-see-these-security-bugs-so-that-I-can-back-port-the-fixes-to-my-downstream-project-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:3480### Can I see these security bugs so that I can back-port the fixes to my downstream project?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:5681
82Many developers of other projects use V8, Chromium, and sub-components of
83Chromium in their own projects. This is great! We are glad that Chromium and V8
84suit your needs.
85
86We want to open up fixed security bugs (as described in the previous answer),
87and will generally give downstream developers access sooner. **However, please
88be aware that backporting security patches from recent versions to old versions
89cannot always work.** (There are several reasons for this: The patch won't apply
90to old versions; the solution was to add or remove a feature or change an API;
91the issue may seem minor until it's too late; and so on.) We believe the latest
92stable versions of Chromium and V8 are the most stable and secure. We also
93believe that tracking the latest stable upstream is usually less work for
94greater benefit in the long run than backporting. We strongly recommend that you
95track the latest stable branches, and we support only the latest stable branch.
96
Eric Lawrence122e86882017-12-07 22:53:0597<a name="TOC-Severity-Guidelines"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:3498### How does the Chrome team determine severity of security bugs?
Eric Lawrence122e86882017-12-07 22:53:0599
100See the [severity guidelines](severity-guidelines.md) for more information.
Tom Sepeze8fb33202018-11-01 19:31:32101Only security issues are considered under the security vulnerability rewards
102program. Other types of bugs, which we call "functional bugs", are not.
Eric Lawrence122e86882017-12-07 22:53:05103
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34104## Threat Model
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56105
Eric Lawrence15fdea252017-08-09 19:37:41106<a name="TOC-Timing-Attacks"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34107### Are timing attacks considered security vulnerabilities?
Eric Lawrence15fdea252017-08-09 19:37:41108
109Some timing attacks are considered security vulnerabilities, and some are
110considered privacy vulnerabilities. Timing attacks vary significantly in terms
111of impact, reliability, and exploitability.
112
113Some timing attacks weaken mitigations like ASLR (e.g.
114[Issue 665930](https://crbug.com/665930)). Others attempt to circumvent the same
115origin policy, for instance, by using SVG filters to read pixels
116cross-origin (e.g. [Issue 686253](https://crbug.com/686253) and
117[Issue 615851](https://crbug.com/615851)).
118
119Many timing attacks rely upon the availability of high-resolution timing
120information [Issue 508166](https://crbug.com/508166); such timing data often has
121legitimate usefulness in non-attack scenarios making it unappealing to remove.
122
123Timing attacks against the browser's HTTP Cache (like
124[Issue 74987](https://crbug.com/74987)) can potentially leak information about
125which sites the user has previously loaded. The browser could attempt to protect
126against such attacks (e.g. by bypassing the cache) at the cost of performance
127and thus user-experience. To mitigate against such timing attacks, end-users can
128delete browsing history and/or browse sensitive sites using Chrome's Incognito
129or Guest browsing modes.
130
131Other timing attacks can be mitigated via clever design changes. For instance,
132[Issue 544765](https://crbug.com/544765) describes an attack whereby an attacker
133can probe for the presence of HSTS rules (set by prior site visits) by timing
Eric Lawrence29ca2722018-02-22 19:04:05134the load of resources with URLs "fixed-up" by HSTS. Prior to Chrome 64, HSTS
135rules [were shared](https://crbug.com/774643) between regular browsing and
136Incognito mode, making the attack more interesting. The attack was mitigated by
137changing Content-Security-Policy such that secure URLs will match rules
138demanding non-secure HTTP urls, a fix that has also proven useful to help to
139unblock migrations to HTTPS. Similarly, [Issue 707071](https://crbug.com/707071)
140describes a timing attack in which an attacker could determine what Android
141applications are installed; the attack was mitigated by introducing randomness
142in the execution time of the affected API.
Eric Lawrence15fdea252017-08-09 19:37:41143
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34144<a name="TOC-What-if-a-Chrome-component-breaks-an-OS-security-boundary-"></a>
145### What if a Chrome component breaks an OS security boundary?
146
147If Chrome or any of its components (e.g. updater) can be abused to
148perform a local privilege escalation, then it may be treated as a
149valid security vulnerability.
150
151Running any Chrome component with higher privileges than intended is
152not a security bug and we do not recommend running Chrome as an
153Administrator on Windows, or as root on POSIX.
154
155<a name="TOC-Why-isn-t-passive-browser-fingerprinting-including-passive-cookies-in-Chrome-s-threat-model-"></a>
156<a name="TOC-What-is-Chrome-s-threat-model-for-fingerprinting-"></a>
157### What is Chrome's threat model for fingerprinting?
158
159> **Update, August 2019:** Please note that this answer has changed. We have
160> updated our threat model to include fingerprinting.
161
162Although [we do not consider fingerprinting issues to be *security
163vulnerabilities*](#TOC-Are-privacy-issues-considered-security-bugs-), we do now
164consider them to be privacy bugs that we will try to resolve. We distinguish two
165forms of fingerprinting.
166
167* **Passive fingerprinting** refers to fingerprinting techniques that do not
168require a JavaScript API call to achieve. This includes (but is not limited to)
169mechanisms like [ETag
170cookies](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_ETag#Tracking_using_ETags) and [HSTS
171cookies](https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/79518/what-are-hsts-super-cookies).
172* **Active fingerprinting** refers to fingerprinting techniques that do require
173a JavaScript API call to achieve. Examples include most of the techniques in
174[EFF's Panopticlick proof of concept](https://panopticlick.eff.org).
175
176For passive fingerprinting, our ultimate goal is (to the extent possible) to
177reduce the information content available to below the threshold for usefulness.
178
179For active fingerprinting, our ultimate goal is to establish a [privacy
180budget](https://github.com/bslassey/privacy-budget) and to keep web origins
181below the budget (such as by rejecting some API calls when the origin exceeds
182its budget). To avoid breaking rich web applications that people want to use,
183Chrome may increase an origin's budget when it detects that a person is using
184the origin heavily. As with passive fingerprinting, our goal is to set the
185default budget below the threshold of usefulness for fingerprinting.
186
187These are both long-term goals. As of this writing (August 2019) we do not
188expect that Chrome will immediately achieve them.
189
190For background on fingerprinting and the difficulty of stopping it, see [Arvind
191Narayanan's site](https://33bits.wordpress.com/about/) and [Peter Eckersley's
192discussion of the information theory behind
193Panopticlick](https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2010/01/primer-information-theory-and-privacy).
194There is also [a pretty good analysis of in-browser fingerprinting
195vectors](https://dev.chromium.org/Home/chromium-security/client-identification-mechanisms).
196
197<a name="TOC-I-found-a-phishing-or-malware-site-not-blocked-by-Safe-Browsing.-Is-this-a-security-vulnerability-"></a>
198### I found a phishing or malware site not blocked by Safe Browsing. Is this a security vulnerability?
199
200Malicious sites not yet blocked by Safe Browsing can be reported via
201[https://www.google.com/safebrowsing/report_phish/](https://www.google.com/safebrowsing/report_phish/).
202Safe Browsing is primarily a blocklist of known-unsafe sites; the feature warns
203the user if they attempt to navigate to a site known to deliver phishing or
204malware content. You can learn more about this feature in these references:
205
206* [https://developers.google.com/safe-browsing/](https://developers.google.com/safe-browsing/)
207* [https://www.google.com/transparencyreport/safebrowsing/](https://www.google.com/transparencyreport/safebrowsing/)
208
209In general, it is not considered a security bug if a given malicious site is not
210blocked by the Safe Browsing feature, unless the site is on the blocklist but is
211allowed to load anyway. For instance, if a site found a way to navigate through
212the blocking red warning page without user interaction, that would be a security
213bug. A malicious site may exploit a security vulnerability (for instance,
214spoofing the URL in the **Location Bar**). This would be tracked as a security
215vulnerability in the relevant feature, not Safe Browsing itself.
216
217<a name="TOC-I-can-download-a-file-with-an-unsafe-extension-and-it-is-not-classified-as-dangerous-"></a>
218### I can download a file with an unsafe extension and it is not classified as dangerous - is this a security bug?
219
220Chrome tries to warn users before they open files that might modify their
221system. What counts as a dangerous file will vary depending on the operating
222system Chrome is running on, the default set of file handlers, Chrome settings,
223Enterprise policy and verdicts on both the site and the file from [Safe
224Browsing](https://code.google.com/apis/safebrowsing/). Because of this it will
225often be okay for a user to download and run a file. However, if you can clearly
226demonstrate how to bypass one of these protections then we’d like to hear about
227it. You can see if a Safe Browsing check happened by opening
228chrome://safe-browsing before starting the download.
229
Daniel Ruberyc7ac344232023-10-09 22:16:20230<a name="TOC-what-about-dangerous-file-types-not-listed-in-the-file-type-policy-"></a>
231### What about dangerous file types not listed in the file type policy?
232
233The [file type
234policy](https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:components/safe_browsing/content/resources/download_file_types.asciipb?q=download_file_types.asciipb%20-f:%2Fgen%2F&ss=chromium)
235controls some details of which security checks to enable for a given file
236extension. Most importantly, it controls whether we contact Safe Browsing about
237a download, and whether we show a warning for all downloads of that file type.
238Starting in M74, the default for unknown file types has been to contact Safe
239Browsing. This prevents large-scale abuse from a previously unknown file type.
240Starting in M105, showing a warning for all downloads of an extension became
241reserved for exceptionally dangerous file types that can compromise a user
242without any user interaction with the file (e.g. DLL hijacking). If you discover
243a new file type that meets that condition, we’d like to hear about it.
244
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34245<a name="TOC-I-can-download-a-file-with-an-unsafe-extension-but-a-different-extension-or-file-type-is-shown-to-the-user-"></a>
246### I can download a file with an unsafe extension but a different extension or file type is shown to the user - is this a security bug?
247<a name="TOC-Extensions-for-downloaded-files-are-not-shown-in-a-file-dialog-"></a>
248### Extensions for downloaded files are not shown in a file dialog - is this a security bug?
249<a name="TOC-The-wrong-description-for-a-file-type-is-added-by-Chrome-"></a>
250### The wrong description for a file type is added by Chrome - is this a security bug?
251
252Chrome tries to let users know what they will be saving and downloading before
253they do so. Often operating systems will obscure a file’s type or extension and
254there is little we can do about that. Chrome shows information to help users
255make these decisions, both in Chrome-owned UI and in information that Chrome
256passes to OS-owned UI. If this information can be manipulated from a web site to
257mislead a user, then we’d like to hear about it.
258[Example](https://crbug.com/1137247).
259
260<a name="TOC-I-can-download-a-file-and-OS-indicators-for-its-provenance-are-not-applied-"></a>
261### I can download a file and OS indicators for its provenance are not applied - is this a security bug?
262
263Chrome attempts to label files downloaded from the internet with metadata using
264operating system APIs where these are available – for instance applying the Mark
265of the Web on Windows. This is often not possible (for instance on non-NTFS file
266systems on Windows, or for files inside downloaded archives) or disabled by
267policy. If a web site can cause Chrome to download a file without Chrome then
268adding this metadata as usual, we’d like to hear about it.
269
270<a name="TOC-I-can-cause-a-hard-or-soft-link-to-be-written-to-a-directory-bypassing-normal-OS-blocks-"></a>
271### I can cause a hard or soft link to be written to a directory bypassing normal OS blocks - is this a security bug?
272
273Chrome should not allow filesystem links to be created by initiating a download.
274[Example](https://crbug.com/1140417). [Example](https://crbug.com/1137247#c12).
275
276<a name="TOC-I-can-hijack-a-user-gesture-and-trick-a-user-into-accepting-a-permission-or-downloading-a-file-"></a>
277### I can hijack a user gesture and trick a user into accepting a permission or downloading a file - is this a security bug?
278
279Chrome tries to design its prompts to select safe defaults. If a prompt can
280accidentally be accepted without the user having an opportunity to make a
281decision about the prompt then we’d like to know. Examples might include poor
282defaults so that a user holding down an enter key might accept a dialog they
283would want to dismiss. [Example](https://crbug.com/854455#c11).
284
285Note that a user navigating to a download will cause a file to be
286[downloaded](https://crbug.com/1114592).
287
288## Areas outside Chrome's Threat Model
289
290<a name="TOC-Are-privacy-issues-considered-security-bugs-"></a>
291### Are privacy issues considered security bugs?
292
293No. The Chrome Privacy team treats privacy issues, such as leaking information
294from Incognito, fingerprinting, and bugs related to deleting browsing data as
295functional bugs.
296
297Privacy issues are not considered under the security vulnerability rewards
298program; the [severity guidelines](severity-guidelines.md) outline the types of
299bugs that are considered security vulnerabilities in more detail.
300
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56301<a name="TOC-What-are-the-security-and-privacy-guarantees-of-Incognito-mode-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34302### What are the security and privacy guarantees of Incognito mode?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56303
304Bugs in Incognito mode are tracked as privacy bugs, not security bugs.
305
Chris Palmer9839ce42017-08-16 20:59:15306The [Help Center](https://support.google.com/chrome/?p=cpn_incognito) explains
307what privacy protections Incognito mode attempts to enforce. In particular,
308please note that Incognito is not a “do not track” mode, and it does not hide
309aspects of your identity from web sites. Chrome does offer a way to send Do Not
310Track request to servers; see chrome://settings/?search=do+not+track
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56311
312When in Incognito mode, Chrome does not store any new history, cookies, or other
313state in non-volatile storage. However, Incognito windows will be able to access
314some previously-stored state, such as browsing history.
315
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34316<a name="TOC-Are-XSS-filter-bypasses-considered-security-bugs-"></a>
317### Are XSS filter bypasses considered security bugs?
318
319No. Chromium once contained a reflected XSS filter called the [XSSAuditor](https://www.chromium.org/developers/design-documents/xss-auditor)
320that was a best-effort second line of defense against reflected XSS flaws found
321in web sites. The XSS Auditor was [removed in Chrome 78](https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!msg/blink-dev/TuYw-EZhO9g/blGViehIAwAJ).
Tom Sepezfd089b8f2023-08-09 17:31:44322Consequently, Chromium no longer takes any special action in response to an
323X-XSS-Protection header.
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34324
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56325<a name="TOC-Are-denial-of-service-issues-considered-security-bugs-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34326### Are denial of service issues considered security bugs?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56327
Tom Sepeze8fb33202018-11-01 19:31:32328No. Denial of Service (DoS) issues are treated as **abuse** or **stability**
329issues rather than security vulnerabilities.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56330
331* If you find a reproducible crash, we encourage you to [report
332 it](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/entry?template=Crash%20Report).
333* If you find a site that is abusing the user experience (e.g. preventing you
334 from leaving a site), we encourage you to [report
335 it](https://crbug.com/new).
336
337DoS issues are not considered under the security vulnerability rewards program;
Varun Khanejadf1bc00e2017-08-10 05:22:40338the [severity guidelines](severity-guidelines.md) outline the types of bugs that
339are considered security vulnerabilities in more detail.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56340
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56341<a name="TOC-Why-aren-t-physically-local-attacks-in-Chrome-s-threat-model-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34342### Why aren't physically-local attacks in Chrome's threat model?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56343
344People sometimes report that they can compromise Chrome by installing a
345malicious DLL in a place where Chrome will load it, by hooking APIs (e.g. [Issue
346130284](https://crbug.com/130284)), or by otherwise altering the configuration
Tom Sepezf6b2e782020-04-06 23:08:55347of the device.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56348
349We consider these attacks outside Chrome's threat model, because there is no way
350for Chrome (or any application) to defend against a malicious user who has
Tom Sepezf6b2e782020-04-06 23:08:55351managed to log into your device as you, or who can run software with the
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56352privileges of your operating system user account. Such an attacker can modify
353executables and DLLs, change environment variables like `PATH`, change
354configuration files, read any data your user account owns, email it to
Tom Sepezf6b2e782020-04-06 23:08:55355themselves, and so on. Such an attacker has total control over your device,
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56356and nothing Chrome can do would provide a serious guarantee of defense. This
357problem is not special to Chrome ­— all applications must trust the
358physically-local user.
359
360There are a few things you can do to mitigate risks from people who have
361physical control over **your** computer, in certain circumstances.
362
363* To stop people from reading your data in cases of device theft or loss, use
364 full disk encryption (FDE). FDE is a standard feature of most operating
365 systems, including Windows Vista and later, Mac OS X Lion and later, and
366 some distributions of Linux. (Some older versions of Mac OS X had partial
367 disk encryption: they could encrypt the user’s home folder, which contains
368 the bulk of a user’s sensitive data.) Some FDE systems allow you to use
369 multiple sources of key material, such as the combination of both a
370 password and a key file on a USB token. When available, you should use
371 multiple sources of key material to achieve the strongest defense. Chrome
372 OS encrypts users’ home directories.
373* If you share your computer with other people, take advantage of your
374 operating system’s ability to manage multiple login accounts, and use a
375 distinct account for each person. For guests, Chrome OS has a built-in
376 Guest account for this purpose.
377* Take advantage of your operating system’s screen lock feature.
378* You can reduce the amount of information (including credentials like
379 cookies and passwords) that Chrome will store locally by using Chrome's
380 Content Settings (chrome://settings/content) and turning off the form
381 auto-fill and password storage features
382 ([chrome://settings/search#password](chrome://settings/search#password)).
383
384There is almost nothing you can do to mitigate risks when using a **public**
385computer.
386
387* Assume everything you do on a public computer will become, well, public.
388 You have no control over the operating system or other software on the
389 machine, and there is no reason to trust the integrity of it.
Eric Lawrence29ca2722018-02-22 19:04:05390* If you must use such a computer, use Incognito mode and close all Incognito
391 windows when you are done browsing to limit the amount of data you leave
392 behind. Note that Incognito mode **provides no protection** if the system has
393 already been compromised as described above.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56394
395<a name="TOC-Why-aren-t-compromised-infected-machines-in-Chrome-s-threat-model-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34396### Why aren't compromised/infected machines in Chrome's threat model?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56397
Tom Sepez279d9f42020-11-30 21:58:58398Although the attacker may now be remote, the consequences are essentially the
399same as with physically-local attacks. The attacker's code, when it runs as
400your user account on your machine, can do anything you can do. (See also
401[Microsoft's Ten Immutable Laws Of
Eric Lawrence5e1a9c712018-09-12 20:55:19402Security](https://web.archive.org/web/20160311224620/https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh278941.aspx).)
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56403
Tom Sepez279d9f42020-11-30 21:58:58404Other cases covered by this section include leaving a debugger port open to
405the world, remote shells, and so forth.
406
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56407<a name="TOC-Does-entering-JavaScript:-URLs-in-the-URL-bar-or-running-script-in-the-developer-tools-mean-there-s-an-XSS-vulnerability-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34408### Does entering JavaScript: URLs in the URL bar or running script in the developer tools mean there's an XSS vulnerability?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56409
Eric Lawrence29ca2722018-02-22 19:04:05410[No](https://crbug.com/81697). Chrome does not attempt to prevent the user from
411knowingly running script against loaded documents, either by entering script in
412the Developer Tools console or by typing a JavaScript: URI into the URL bar.
413Chrome and other browsers do undertake some efforts to prevent *paste* of script
414URLs in the URL bar (to limit
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56415[social-engineering](https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/ieinternals/2011/05/19/socially-engineered-xss-attacks/))
416but users are otherwise free to invoke script against pages using either the URL
417bar or the DevTools console.
418
Tom Sepez5b700482020-04-06 20:07:21419<a name="TOC-Does-executing-JavaScript-from-a-bookmark-mean-there-s-an-XSS-vulnerability-"></a>
Eric Lawrence2de6aaa2023-04-13 17:06:55420### Does executing JavaScript from a bookmark or the Home button mean there's an XSS vulnerability?
Tom Sepez5b700482020-04-06 20:07:21421
422No. Chromium allows users to create bookmarks to JavaScript URLs that will run
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56423on the currently-loaded page when the user clicks the bookmark; these are called
424[bookmarklets](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bookmarklet).
425
Eric Lawrence2de6aaa2023-04-13 17:06:55426Similarly, the Home button may be configured to invoke a JavaScript URL when clicked.
427
Tom Sepezfeca2de2020-04-01 22:58:29428<a name="TOC-Does-executing-JavaScript-in-a-PDF-file-mean-there-s-an-XSS-vulnerability-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34429### Does executing JavaScript in a PDF file mean there's an XSS vulnerability?
Tom Sepezfeca2de2020-04-01 22:58:29430
431No. PDF files have the ability to run JavaScript, usually to facilitate field
432validation during form fill-out. Note that the set of bindings provided to
Tom Sepez72119c3c2022-12-13 18:48:56433the PDF are more limited than those provided by the DOM to HTML documents, nor
434do PDFs get any ambient authority based upon the domain from which they are
435served (e.g. no document.cookie).
Tom Sepezfeca2de2020-04-01 22:58:29436
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34437<a name="TOC-Are-PDF-files-static-content-in-Chromium-"></a>
438### Are PDF files static content in Chromium?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56439
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34440No. PDF files have some powerful capabilities including invoking printing or
441posting form data. To mitigate abuse of these capabiliies, such as beaconing
442upon document open, we require interaction with the document (a "user gesture")
443before allowing their use.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56444
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34445<a name="TOC-What-about-URL-spoofs-using-Internationalized-Domain-Names-IDN-"></a>
446### What about URL spoofs using Internationalized Domain Names (IDN)?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56447
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34448We try to balance the needs of our international userbase while protecting users
449against confusable homograph attacks. Despite this, there are a list of known
450IDN display issues we are still working on.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56451
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34452* Please see [this document](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1_xJz3J9kkAPwk3pma6K3X12SyPTyyaJDSCxTfF8Y5sU)
453for a list of known issues and how we handle them.
454* [This document](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/idn.md)
455describes Chrome's IDN policy in detail.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56456
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34457<a name="TOC-Chrome-silently-syncs-extensions-across-devices.-Is-this-a-security-vulnerability-"></a>
458### Chrome silently syncs extensions across devices. Is this a security vulnerability?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56459
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34460This topic has been moved to the [Extensions Security FAQ](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/extensions/docs/security_faq.md).
Chris Palmer8d95482a2019-08-28 22:48:45461
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34462<a name="TOC-Why-arent-null-pointer-dereferences-considered-security-bugs-"></a>
463### Why aren't null pointer dereferences considered security bugs?
Chris Palmer8d95482a2019-08-28 22:48:45464
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34465Null pointer dereferences with consistent, small, fixed offsets are not considered
466security bugs. A read or write to the NULL page results in a non-exploitable crash.
Daniel Cheng78780d22024-01-06 06:47:43467If the offset is larger than 32KB, or if there's uncertainty about whether the
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34468offset is controllable, it is considered a security bug.
Chris Palmer8d95482a2019-08-28 22:48:45469
Daniel Cheng78780d22024-01-06 06:47:43470All supported Chrome platforms do not allow mapping memory in at least the first
47132KB of address space:
472
473- Windows: Windows 8 and later disable mapping the first 64k of address space;
474 see page 33 of [Exploit Mitigation Improvements in Windows
475 8][windows-null-page-mapping] [[archived]][windows-null-page-mapping-archived].
476- Mac and iOS: by default, the linker reserves the first 4GB of address space
477 with the `__PAGEZERO` segment for 64-bit binaries.
478- Linux: the default `mmap_min_addr` value for supported distributions is at
479 least 64KB.
480- Android: [CTS][android-mmap_min_addr] enforces that `mmap_min_addr` is set to
481 exactly 32KB.
482- ChromeOS: the [ChromeOS kernels][chromeos-mmap_min_addr] set the default
483 `mmap_min_addr` value to at least 32KB.
484- Fuchsia: the [userspace base address][fuchsia-min-base-address] begins at 2MB;
485 this is configured per-platform but set to the same value on all platforms.
486
487[windows-null-page-mapping]: https://media.blackhat.com/bh-us-12/Briefings/M_Miller/BH_US_12_Miller_Exploit_Mitigation_Slides.pdf
488[windows-null-page-mapping-archived]: https://web.archive.org/web/20230608131033/https://media.blackhat.com/bh-us-12/Briefings/M_Miller/BH_US_12_Miller_Exploit_Mitigation_Slides.pdf
489[android-mmap_min_addr]: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/cts/+/496152a250d10e629d31ac90b2e828ad77b8d70a/tests/tests/security/src/android/security/cts/KernelSettingsTest.java#43
490[chromeos-mmap_min_addr]: https://source.chromium.org/search?q=%22CONFIG_DEFAULT_MMAP_MIN_ADDR%3D%22%20path:chromeos%2F&ss=chromiumos%2Fchromiumos%2Fcodesearch:src%2Fthird_party%2Fkernel%2F
491[fuchsia-min-base-address]: https://cs.opensource.google/fuchsia/fuchsia/+/main:zircon/kernel/arch/arm64/include/arch/kernel_aspace.h;l=20;drc=eeceea01eee2615de74b1339bcf6e6c2c6f72769
492
Alex Gough2d9974c2023-04-11 20:47:57493<a name="TOC-Indexing-a-container-out-of-bounds-hits-a-libcpp-verbose-abort--is-this-a-security-bug-"></a>
494### Indexing a container out of bounds hits a __libcpp_verbose_abort, is this a security bug?
495
496`std::vector` and other containers are now protected by libc++ hardening on all
497platforms [crbug.com/1335422](https://crbug.com/1335422). Indexing these
498containers out of bounds is now a safe crash - if a proof-of-concept reliably
499causes a crash in production builds we consider these to be functional rather than
500security issues.
501
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34502<a name="TOC-Are-stack-overflows-considered-security-bugs-"></a>
503### Are stack overflows considered security bugs?
504
505No. Guard pages mean that stack overflows are considered unexploitable, and
506are regarded as [denial of service bugs](#TOC-Are-denial-of-service-issues-considered-security-bugs-).
507The only exception is if an attacker can jump over the guard pages allocated by
508the operating system and avoid accessing them, e.g.:
509
510* A frame with a very large stack allocation.
511* C variable length array with an attacker-controlled size.
512* A call to `alloca()` with an attacker-controlled size.
513
514<a name="TOC-Are-enterprise-admins-considered-privileged-"></a>
515### Are enterprise admins considered privileged?
516
517Chrome [can't guard against local
518attacks](#TOC-Why-aren-t-physically-local-attacks-in-Chrome-s-threat-model-).
519Enterprise administrators often have full control over the device. Does Chrome
520assume that enterprise administrators are as privileged and powerful as other
521local users? It depends:
522
523* On a fully managed machine, for example a [domain-joined Windows
524 machine](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/identity/ad-fs/deployment/join-a-computer-to-a-domain),
525 a device managed via a Mobile Device Management product, or a device with
526 Chrome managed via machine-level [Chrome Browser Cloud
527 Management](https://support.google.com/chrome/?p=cloud_management),
528 the administrator effectively has privileges to view and mutate any state on
529 the device. Chrome [policy implementations](../enterprise/add_new_policy.md)
530 should still guide enterprise admins to the most user-respectful defaults
531 and policy description text should clearly describe the nature of the
532 capabilities and the user impact of them being granted.
533* On an unmanaged machine, Chrome profiles [can be managed via cloud
534 policy](https://support.google.com/chrome/?p=manage_profiles)
535 if users sign into Chrome using a managed account. These policies are called
536 *user policies*. In this scenario, the Chrome enterprise administrator should
537 have privileges only to *view and mutate state within the profile that they
538 administer*. Any access outside that profile requires end-user consent.
539
540Chrome administrators can force-install Chrome extensions without permissions
541prompts, so the same restrictions must apply to the Chrome extension APIs.
542
543Chrome has a long history of policy support with many hundreds of policies. We
544recognize that there may exist policies or policy combinations that can provide
545capabilities outside of the guidance provided here. In cases of clear violation
546of user expectations, we will attempt to remedy these policies and we will apply
547the guidance laid out in this document to any newly added policies.
548
Camille0f2a39f2022-11-04 10:45:04549See the [Web Platform Security
Chris Thompson1f8b00062023-05-31 00:38:49550guidelines](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/security/web-platform-security-guidelines.md#enterprise-policies)
Camille0f2a39f2022-11-04 10:45:04551for more information on how enterprise policies should interact with Web
552Platform APIs.
553
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34554<a name="TOC-Can-I-use-EMET-to-help-protect-Chrome-against-attack-on-Microsoft-Windows-"></a>
555### Can I use EMET to help protect Chrome against attack on Microsoft Windows?
556
557There are [known compatibility
558problems](https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/Home/chromium-security/chromium-and-emet)
559between Microsoft's EMET anti-exploit toolkit and some versions of Chrome. These
560can prevent Chrome from running in some configurations. Moreover, the Chrome
561security team does not recommend the use of EMET with Chrome because its most
562important security benefits are redundant with or superseded by built-in attack
563mitigations within the browser. For users, the very marginal security benefit is
564not usually a good trade-off for the compatibility issues and performance
565degradation the toolkit can cause.
566
567## Certificates & Connection Indicators
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56568
569<a name="TOC-Where-are-the-security-indicators-located-in-the-browser-window-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34570### Where are the security indicators located in the browser window?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56571
572The topmost portion of the browser window, consisting of the **Omnibox** (or
573**Location Bar**), navigation icons, menu icon, and other indicator icons, is
574sometimes called the browser **chrome** (not to be confused with the Chrome
575Browser itself). Actual security indicators can only appear in this section of
576the window. There can be no trustworthy security indicators elsewhere.
577
578Furthermore, Chrome can only guarantee that it is correctly representing URLs
579and their origins at the end of all navigation. Quirks of URL parsing, HTTP
580redirection, and so on are not security concerns unless Chrome is
581misrepresenting a URL or origin after navigation has completed.
582
583Browsers present a dilemma to the user since the output is a combination of
584information coming from both trustworthy sources (the browser itself) and
585untrustworthy sources (the web page), and the untrustworthy sources are allowed
586virtually unlimited control over graphical presentation. The only restriction on
587the page's presentation is that it is confined to the large rectangular area
588directly underneath the chrome, called the **viewport**. Things like hover text
589and URL preview(s), shown in the viewport, are entirely under the control of the
590web page itself. They have no guaranteed meaning, and function only as the page
591desires. This can be even more confusing when pages load content that looks like
592chrome. For example, many pages load images of locks, which look similar to the
593meaningful HTTPS lock in the Omnibox, but in fact do not convey any meaningful
594information about the transport security of that page.
595
596When the browser needs to show trustworthy information, such as the bubble
597resulting from a click on the lock icon, it does so by making the bubble overlap
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51598chrome. This visual detail can't be imitated by the page itself since the page
599is confined to the viewport.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56600
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51601<a name="TOC-Why-does-Chrome-show-a-lock-even-if-my-HTTPS-connection-is-being-proxied-"></a>
602### Why does Chrome show a lock, even if my HTTPS connection is being proxied?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56603
604Some types of software intercept HTTPS connections. Examples include anti-virus
605software, corporate network monitoring tools, and school censorship software. In
606order for the interception to work, you need to install a private trust anchor
607(root certificate) onto your computer. This may have happened when you installed
608your anti-virus software, or when your company's network administrator set up
609your computer. If that has occurred, your HTTPS connections can be viewed or
610modified by the software.
611
612Since you have allowed the trust anchor to be installed onto your computer,
613Chrome assumes that you have consented to HTTPS interception. Anyone who can add
614a trust anchor to your computer can make other changes to your computer, too,
615including changing Chrome. (See also [Why aren't physically-local attacks in
Avi Drissman36d4e2e2017-07-31 20:54:39616Chrome's threat model?](#TOC-Why-aren-t-physically-local-attacks-in-Chrome-s-threat-model-).)
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56617
618<a name="TOC-Why-can-t-I-select-Proceed-Anyway-on-some-HTTPS-error-screens-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34619### Why can’t I select Proceed Anyway on some HTTPS error screens?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56620
621A key guarantee of HTTPS is that Chrome can be relatively certain that it is
622connecting to the true web server and not an impostor. Some sites request an
623even higher degree of protection for their users (i.e. you): they assert to
624Chrome (via Strict Transport Security —
Xiaoyin Liub7985e52017-09-21 18:07:46625[HSTS](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6797) — or by other means) that any
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56626server authentication error should be fatal, and that Chrome must close the
627connection. If you encounter such a fatal error, it is likely that your network
628is under attack, or that there is a network misconfiguration that is
629indistinguishable from an attack.
630
631The best thing you can do in this situation is to raise the issue to your
632network provider (or corporate IT department).
633
634Chrome shows non-recoverable HTTPS errors only in cases where the true server
635has previously asked for this treatment, and when it can be relatively certain
636that the current server is not the true server.
637
638<a name="TOC-How-does-key-pinning-interact-with-local-proxies-and-filters-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34639### How does key pinning interact with local proxies and filters?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56640
641To enable certificate chain validation, Chrome has access to two stores of trust
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51642anchors (i.e., certificates that are empowered as issuers). One trust anchor
Alex Goughc9ab81fd2023-05-15 19:03:14643store is for authenticating public internet servers, and depending on the
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51644version of Chrome being used and the platform it is running on, the
645[Chrome Root Store](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/net/data/ssl/chrome_root_store/faq.md#what-is-the-chrome-root-store)
646might be in use. The private store contains certificates installed by the user
647or the administrator of the client machine. Private intranet servers should
648authenticate themselves with certificates issued by a private trust anchor.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56649
650Chrome’s key pinning feature is a strong form of web site authentication that
651requires a web server’s certificate chain not only to be valid and to chain to a
652known-good trust anchor, but also that at least one of the public keys in the
653certificate chain is known to be valid for the particular site the user is
654visiting. This is a good defense against the risk that any trust anchor can
655authenticate any web site, even if not intended by the site owner: if an
656otherwise-valid chain does not include a known pinned key (“pin”), Chrome will
657reject it because it was not issued in accordance with the site operator’s
658expectations.
659
660Chrome does not perform pin validation when the certificate chain chains up to a
661private trust anchor. A key result of this policy is that private trust anchors
662can be used to proxy (or
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51663[MITM](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man-in-the-middle_attack)) connections,
664even to pinned sites. “Data loss prevention” appliances, firewalls, content
665filters, and malware can use this feature to defeat the protections of key
666pinning.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56667
668We deem this acceptable because the proxy or MITM can only be effective if the
669client machine has already been configured to trust the proxy’s issuing
670certificate — that is, the client is already under the control of the person who
671controls the proxy (e.g. the enterprise’s IT administrator). If the client does
672not trust the private trust anchor, the proxy’s attempt to mediate the
673connection will fail as it should.
674
Adam Langleyc078ba82018-12-17 17:25:46675<a name="TOC-When-is-key-pinning-enabled-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34676### When is key pinning enabled?
Adam Langleyc078ba82018-12-17 17:25:46677
678Key pinning is enabled for Chrome-branded, non-mobile builds when the local
679clock is within ten weeks of the embedded build timestamp. Key pinning is a
680useful security measure but it tightly couples client and server configurations
681and completely breaks when those configurations are out of sync. In order to
682manage that risk we need to ensure that we can promptly update pinning clients
Chris Palmer59877ec2019-11-22 01:28:09683in an emergency and ensure that non-emergency changes can be deployed in a
Adam Langleyc078ba82018-12-17 17:25:46684reasonable timeframe.
685
686Each of the conditions listed above helps ensure those properties:
687Chrome-branded builds are those that Google provides and they all have an
688auto-update mechanism that can be used in an emergency. However, auto-update on
689mobile devices is significantly less effective thus they are excluded. Even in
690cases where auto-update is generally effective, there are still non-trivial
691populations of stragglers for various reasons. The ten-week timeout prevents
692those stragglers from causing problems for regular, non-emergency changes and
693allows stuck users to still, for example, conduct searches and access Chrome's
694homepage to hopefully get unstuck.
695
696In order to determine whether key pinning is active, try loading
Francois Mariere1b8e702023-07-07 05:25:08697[https://pinning-test.badssl.com/](https://pinning-test.badssl.com/). If key
Adam Langleyc078ba82018-12-17 17:25:46698pinning is active the load will _fail_ with a pinning error.
699
Chris Palmer38d751d002017-08-23 17:37:35700<a name="TOC-How-does-certificate-transparency-interact-with-local-proxies-and-filters-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34701### How does Certificate Transparency interact with local proxies and filters?
Chris Palmer38d751d002017-08-23 17:37:35702
Chris Palmer413f3c02017-08-23 17:47:54703Just as [pinning only applies to publicly-trusted trust
704anchors](#TOC-How-does-key-pinning-interact-with-local-proxies-and-filters-),
705Chrome only evaluates Certificate Transparency (CT) for publicly-trusted trust
706anchors. Thus private trust anchors, such as for enterprise middle-boxes and AV
707proxies, do not need to be publicly logged in a CT log.
Chris Palmer38d751d002017-08-23 17:37:35708
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56709<a name="TOC-Why-are-some-web-platform-features-only-available-in-HTTPS-page-loads-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34710### Why are some web platform features only available in HTTPS page-loads?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56711
712The full answer is here: we [Prefer Secure Origins For Powerful New
713Features](https://www.chromium.org/Home/chromium-security/prefer-secure-origins-for-powerful-new-features).
714In short, many web platform features give web origins access to sensitive new
715sources of information, or significant power over a user's experience with their
Eric Romaned127b672018-01-23 19:36:38716computer/phone/watch/etc., or over their experience with it. We would therefore
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56717like to have some basis to believe the origin meets a minimum bar for security,
718that the sensitive information is transported over the Internet in an
Eric Romaned127b672018-01-23 19:36:38719authenticated and confidential way, and that users can make meaningful choices
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56720to trust or not trust a web origin.
721
722Note that the reason we require secure origins for WebCrypto is slightly
723different: An application that uses WebCrypto is almost certainly using it to
724provide some kind of security guarantee (e.g. encrypted instant messages or
725email). However, unless the JavaScript was itself transported to the client
726securely, it cannot actually provide any guarantee. (After all, a MITM attacker
727could have modified the code, if it was not transported securely.)
728
Camille0f2a39f2022-11-04 10:45:04729See the [Web Platform Security
Chris Thompson1f8b00062023-05-31 00:38:49730guidelines](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/security/web-platform-security-guidelines.md#encryption)
Camille0f2a39f2022-11-04 10:45:04731for more information on security guidelines applicable to web platform APIs.
732
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56733<a name="TOC-Which-origins-are-secure-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34734### Which origins are "secure"?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56735
736Secure origins are those that match at least one of the following (scheme, host,
737port) patterns:
738
739* (https, *, *)
740* (wss, *, *)
741* (*, localhost, *)
742* (*, 127/8, *)
743* (*, ::1/128, *)
744* (file, *, —)
745* (chrome-extension, *, —)
746
747That is, secure origins are those that load resources either from the local
748machine (necessarily trusted) or over the network from a
749cryptographically-authenticated server. See [Prefer Secure Origins For Powerful
750New
751Features](https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/Home/chromium-security/prefer-secure-origins-for-powerful-new-features)
752for more details.
753
754<a name="TOC-What-s-the-story-with-certificate-revocation-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34755### What's the story with certificate revocation?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56756
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51757Chrome's primary mechanism for checking certificate revocation status is
Alex Goughc9ab81fd2023-05-15 19:03:14758[CRLsets](https://dev.chromium.org/Home/chromium-security/crlsets).
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51759Additionally, by default, [stapled Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP)
760responses](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OCSP_stapling) are honored.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56761
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51762"Online" certificate revocation status checks using Certificate Revocation
763List (CRL) or OCSP URLs included in certificates are disabled by default. This
764is because unless a client, like Chrome, refuses to connect to a website if it
Alex Goughc9ab81fd2023-05-15 19:03:14765cannot get a valid response, online checks offer limited security value.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56766
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51767Unfortunately, there are many widely-prevalent causes for why a client
768might be unable to get a valid certificate revocation status response to
769include:
770* timeouts (e.g., an OCSP responder is online but does not respond within an
Alex Goughc9ab81fd2023-05-15 19:03:14771 acceptable time limit),
772* availability issues (e.g., the OCSP responder is offline),
773* invalid responses (e.g., a "stale" or malformed status response), and
774* local network attacks misrouting traffic or blocking responses.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56775
Alex Goughc9ab81fd2023-05-15 19:03:14776Additional concern with OCSP checks are related to privacy. OCSP
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51777requests reveal details of individuals' browsing history to the operator of the
778OCSP responder (i.e., a third party). These details can be exposed accidentally
779(e.g., via data breach of logs) or intentionally (e.g., via subpoena). Chrome
780used to perform revocation checks for Extended Validation certificates, but that
781behavior was disabled in 2022 for [privacy reasons](https://groups.google.com/a/mozilla.org/g/dev-security-policy/c/S6A14e_X-T0/m/T4WxWgajAAAJ).
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56782
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51783For more discussion on challenges with certificate revocation status checking,
784explained by Adam Langley, see [https://www.imperialviolet.org/2014/04/29/revocationagain.html](https://www.imperialviolet.org/2014/04/29/revocationagain.html)
785and [https://www.imperialviolet.org/2014/04/19/revchecking.html](https://www.imperialviolet.org/2014/04/19/revchecking.html).
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56786
Ryan Dicksonbbcdf3d2022-11-16 19:43:51787The following enterprise policies can be used to change the default revocation
788checking behavior in Chrome, though these may be removed in the future:
789* [enable soft-fail OCSP](https://chromeenterprise.google/policies/#EnableOnlineRevocationChecks)
790* [hard-fail for local trust anchors](https://chromeenterprise.google/policies/#RequireOnlineRevocationChecksForLocalAnchors).
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56791
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34792## Passwords & Local Data
793
794<a name="TOC-What-about-unmasking-of-passwords-with-the-developer-tools-"></a>
795### What about unmasking of passwords with the developer tools?
796
797One of the most frequent reports we receive is password disclosure using the
798Inspect Element feature (see [Issue 126398](https://crbug.com/126398) for an
799example). People reason that "If I can see the password, it must be a bug."
800However, this is just one of the [physically-local attacks described in the
801previous
802section](#TOC-Why-aren-t-physically-local-attacks-in-Chrome-s-threat-model-),
803and all of those points apply here as well.
804
805The reason the password is masked is only to prevent disclosure via
806"shoulder-surfing" (i.e. the passive viewing of your screen by nearby persons),
807not because it is a secret unknown to the browser. The browser knows the
808password at many layers, including JavaScript, developer tools, process memory,
809and so on. When you are physically local to the computer, and only when you are
810physically local to the computer, there are, and always will be, tools for
811extracting the password from any of these places.
812
813<a name="TOC-Is-Chrome-s-support-for-userinfo-in-HTTP-URLs-e.g.-http:-user:password-example.com-considered-a-vulnerability-"></a>
814### Is Chrome's support for userinfo in HTTP URLs (e.g. http://user:[email protected]) considered a vulnerability?
815
816[Not at this time](https://crbug.com/626951). Chrome supports HTTP and HTTPS
817URIs with username and password information embedded within them for
818compatibility with sites that require this feature. Notably, Chrome will
819suppress display of the username and password information after navigation in
820the URL box to limit the effectiveness of spoofing attacks that may try to
821mislead the user. For instance, navigating to
822`http://[email protected]` will show an address of
823`http://evil.example.com` after the page loads.
824
Tom Sepez83fd1f612022-07-18 21:21:27825Note: We often receive reports calling this an "open redirect". However, it has
826nothing to do with redirection; rather the format of URLs is complex and the
827userinfo may be misread as a host.
828
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56829<a name="TOC-Why-does-the-Password-Manager-ignore-autocomplete-off-for-password-fields-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34830### Why does the Password Manager ignore `autocomplete='off'` for password fields?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56831
832Ignoring `autocomplete='off'` for password fields allows the password manager to
833give more power to users to manage their credentials on websites. It is the
834security team's view that this is very important for user security by allowing
835users to have unique and more complex passwords for websites. As it was
836originally implemented, autocomplete='off' for password fields took control away
837from the user and gave control to the web site developer, which was also a
838violation of the [priority of
Adam Barth3a3bfef2021-10-06 02:36:44839constituencies](https://www.schemehostport.com/2011/10/priority-of-constituencies.html).
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56840For a longer discussion on this, see the [mailing list
841announcement](https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/forum/#!topic/chromium-dev/zhhj7hCip5c).
842
Eric Lawrence122e86882017-12-07 22:53:05843<a name="TOC-Signout-of-Chrome"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34844### Signing out of Chrome does not delete previously-synced data?
Eric Lawrence122e86882017-12-07 22:53:05845
846If you have signed into Chrome and subsequently sign out of Chrome, previously
847saved passwords and other data are not deleted from your device unless you
848select that option when signing out of Chrome.
849
850If you change your Google password, synced data will no longer be updated in
851Chrome instances until you provide the new password to Chrome on each device
852configured to sync. However, previously synced data [remains available](https://crbug.com/792967)
853on each previously-syncing device unless manually removed.
854
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56855<a name="TOC-Why-doesn-t-the-Password-Manager-save-my-Google-password-if-I-am-using-Chrome-Sync-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34856### Why doesn't the Password Manager save my Google password if I am using Chrome Sync?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56857
858In its default mode, Chrome Sync uses your Google password to protect all the
859other passwords in the Chrome Password Manager.
860
861In general, it is a bad idea to store the credential that protects an asset in
862the same place as the asset itself. An attacker who could temporarily compromise
863the Chrome Password Manager could, by stealing your Google password, obtain
864continuing access to all your passwords. Imagine you store your valuables in a
865safe, and you accidentally forget to close the safe. If a thief comes along,
866they might steal all of your valuables. That’s bad, but imagine if you had also
867left the combination to the safe inside as well. Now the bad guy has access to
868all of your valuables and all of your future valuables, too. The password
869manager is similar, except you probably would not even know if a bad guy
870accessed it.
871
872To prevent this type of attack, Chrome Password Manager does not save the Google
873password for the account you sync with Chrome. If you have multiple Google
874accounts, the Chrome Password Manager will save the passwords for accounts other
875than the one you are syncing with.
876
877<a name="TOC-Does-the-Password-Manager-store-my-passwords-encrypted-on-disk-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34878### Does the Password Manager store my passwords encrypted on disk?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56879
880Chrome generally tries to use the operating system's user storage mechanism
881wherever possible and stores them encrypted on disk, but it is platform
882specific:
883
884* On Windows, Chrome uses the [Data Protection API
885 (DPAPI)](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms995355.aspx) to bind
886 your passwords to your user account and store them on disk encrypted with
887 a key only accessible to processes running as the same logged on user.
888* On macOS, Chrome previously stored credentials directly in the user's
889 Keychain, but for technical reasons, it has switched to storing the
890 credentials in "Login Data" in the Chrome users profile directory, but
891 encrypted on disk with a key that is then stored in the user's Keychain.
892 See [Issue 466638](https://crbug.com/466638) for further explanation.
Christos Froussios2a02cc52019-07-30 07:04:46893* On Linux, Chrome previously stored credentials directly in the user's
Tom Anderson761687a2023-06-14 17:27:39894 Gnome Secret Service or KWallet, but for technical reasons, it has switched to
Christos Froussios2a02cc52019-07-30 07:04:46895 storing the credentials in "Login Data" in the Chrome user's profile directory,
896 but encrypted on disk with a key that is then stored in the user's Gnome
Tom Anderson761687a2023-06-14 17:27:39897 Secret Service or KWallet. If there is no available Secret Service or KWallet,
898 the data is not encrypted when stored.
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56899* On iOS, passwords are currently stored directly in the iOS Keychain and
900 referenced from the rest of the metadata stored in a separate DB. The plan
901 there is to just store them in plain text in the DB, because iOS gives
902 strong guarantees about only Chrome being able to access its storage. See
903 [Issue 520437](https://crbug.com/520437) to follow this migration.
904
Adrian Taylorae8545252021-05-27 17:16:51905<a name="TOC-If-theres-a-way-to-see-stored-passwords-without-entering-a-password--is-this-a-security-bug-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34906### If there's a way to see stored passwords without entering a password, is this a security bug?
Adrian Taylorae8545252021-05-27 17:16:51907
908No. If an attacker has control of your login on your device, they can get to
909your passwords by inspecting Chrome disk files or memory. (See
910[why aren't physically-local attacks in Chrome's threat
911model](#TOC-Why-aren-t-physically-local-attacks-in-Chrome-s-threat-model-)).
912
913On some platforms we ask for a password before revealing stored passwords,
914but this is not considered a robust defense. It’s historically to stop
915users inadvertently revealing their passwords on screen, for example if
916they’re screen sharing. We don’t do this on all platforms because we consider
917such risks greater on some than on others.
918
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34919## Other
Alex Gough8dc4f562022-04-18 22:14:05920
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56921<a name="TOC-What-is-the-security-story-for-Service-Workers-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34922### What is the security story for Service Workers?
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56923
924See our dedicated [Service Worker Security
Eric Lawrence [MSFT]f80579552021-04-22 18:39:26925FAQ](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/docs/security/service-worker-security-faq.md).
Chris Palmer554c66e2017-07-29 01:02:56926
Devlin Cronin7304fec2021-06-02 22:51:26927<a name="TOC-What-is-the-security-story-for-Extensions-"></a>
Alex Goughe7bcbea2022-05-03 21:45:34928### What is the security story for Extensions?
Devlin Cronin7304fec2021-06-02 22:51:26929
930See our dedicated [Extensions Security FAQ](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/main/extensions/docs/security_faq.md).
Adrian Taylord57a4c62022-11-10 10:27:50931
Adrian Taylor1bbbf142023-08-29 17:41:17932<a name="TOC-What-is-the-security-model-for-Chrome-Custom-Tabs-"></a>
933### What's the security model for Chrome Custom Tabs?
934
935See our [Chrome Custom Tabs security FAQ](custom-tabs-faq.md).
936
Adrian Taylor82a534b2023-05-09 19:21:20937<a name="TOC-Are-all-Chrome-updates-important--"></a>
938### Are all Chrome updates important?
939
940Yes - see [our updates FAQ](updates.md).
941
942<a name="TOC-What-older-Chrome-versions-are-supported--"></a>
943### What older Chrome versions are supported?
944
945We always recommend being on the most recent Chrome stable version - see
946[our updates FAQ](updates.md).
947
Adrian Taylord57a4c62022-11-10 10:27:50948<a name="TOC-Im-making-a-Chromium-based-browser-how-should-I-secure-it-"></a>
949### I'm making a Chromium-based browser. How should I secure it?
950
951If you want to make a browser based on Chromium, you should stay up to date
952with Chromium's security fixes. There are adversaries who weaponize fixed
953Chromium bugs ("n-day vulnerabilities") to target browsers which haven’t yet
954absorbed those fixes.
955
956Decide whether your approach is to stay constantly up to date with Chromium
957releases, or to backport security fixes onto some older version, upgrading
958Chromium versions less frequently.
959
960Backporting security fixes sounds easier than forward-porting features, but in
961our experience, this is false. Chromium releases 400+ security bug fixes per
962year ([example
963query](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/list?q=type%3DBug-Security%20has%3Arelease%20closed%3Etoday-730%20closed%3Ctoday-365%20allpublic&can=1)).
964Some downstream browsers take risks by backporting only Medium+ severity fixes,
965but that's still over 300 ([example
966query](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/list?q=type%3DBug-Security%20has%3Arelease%20closed%3Etoday-730%20closed%3Ctoday-365%20allpublic%20Security_Severity%3DMedium%2CHigh%2CCritical&can=1)).
967Most are trivial cherry-picks; but others require rework and require versatile
968engineers who can make good decisions about any part of a large codebase.
969
970Our recommendation is to stay up-to-date with Chrome's released versions. You
971should aim to release a version of your browser within just a few days of each
972Chrome [stable
973release](https://chromereleases.googleblog.com/search/label/Stable%20updates).
974If your browser is sufficiently widely-used, you can [apply for advance notice
975of fixed vulnerabilities](https://www.chromium.org/Home/chromium-security/) to
976make this a little easier.
977
978Finally, if you choose the backporting approach, please explain the security
979properties to your users. Some fraction of security improvements cannot be
980backported. This can happen for several reasons, for example: because they
981depend upon architectural changes (e.g. breaking API changes); because the
982security improvement is a significant new feature; or because the security
983improvement is the removal of a broken feature.