Anonymous credentials on a standard Java card
Patrik Bichsel, Jan Camenisch, et al.
CCS 2009
Many influential industrial players are currently pursuing the development of new protocols for federated identity management. The security assertion markup language (SAML) is an important standardized example of this new protocol class and will be widely used in business-to-business scenarios to reduce user-management costs. SAML utilizes a constraint-based specification that is a popular design technique of this protocol class. It does not include a general security analysis, but provides an attack-by-attack list of countermeasures as security consideration. We present a security analysis of the SAML single sign-on browser/artifact profile, which is the first one for such a protocol standard. Our analysis of the protocol design reveals several flaws in the specification that can lead to vulnerable implementations. To demonstrate their impact, we exploit some of these flaws to mount attacks on the protocol.
Patrik Bichsel, Jan Camenisch, et al.
CCS 2009
Sören Bleikertz, Carsten Vogel, et al.
ACSAC 2014
Michael Backes, Thomas Groß
CCS 2005
Jan Camenisch, Thomas Groß
ACM TISSEC