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proposals/4147-including-device-keys-with-olm-encrypted-events.md
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# MSC4147: Including device keys with Olm-encrypted to-device messages | ||
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Summary: a proposal to ensure that messages sent from a short-lived (but | ||
genuine) device can be securely distinguished from those sent from a spoofed | ||
device. | ||
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## Background | ||
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When a Matrix client receives an encrypted message, it is necessary to | ||
establish whether that message was sent from a device genuinely belonging to | ||
the apparent sender, or from a spoofed device (for example, a device created by | ||
an attacker with access to the sender's account such as a malicious server | ||
admin, or a man-in-the-middle). | ||
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In short, this is done by requiring a signature on the sending device's device | ||
keys from the sending user's [self-signing cross-signing | ||
key](https://spec.matrix.org/v1.12/client-server-api/#cross-signing). Such a | ||
signature proves that the sending device was genuine. | ||
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Current client implementations check for such a signature by | ||
[querying](https://spec.matrix.org/v1.12/client-server-api/#post_matrixclientv3keysquery) | ||
the sender's device keys when an encrypted message is received. | ||
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However, this does not work if the sending device logged out in the time | ||
between sending the message and it being received. This is particularly likely | ||
if the recipient is offline for a long time. In such a case, the sending server | ||
will have forgotten the sending device (and any cross-signing signatures) by | ||
the time the recipient queries for it. This makes the received message | ||
indistinguishable from one sent from a spoofed device. | ||
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Current implementations work around this by displaying a warning such as "sent | ||
by a deleted or unknown device" against the received message, but such | ||
messaging is unsatisfactory: a message should be either trusted or not. | ||
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We propose to solve this by including a copy of the device keys in the | ||
Olm-encrypted message, along with the cross-signing signatures, so that the | ||
recipient does not have to try to query the sender's keys. | ||
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## Proposal | ||
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The plaintext payload of to-device messages encrypted with the [`m.olm.v1.curve25519-aes-sha2` encryption | ||
algorithm](https://spec.matrix.org/v1.12/client-server-api/#molmv1curve25519-aes-sha2) | ||
is currently of the form: | ||
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```json | ||
{ | ||
"type": "<type of the plaintext event>", | ||
"content": "<content for the plaintext event>", | ||
"sender": "<sender_user_id>", | ||
"recipient": "<recipient_user_id>", | ||
"recipient_keys": { | ||
"ed25519": "<our_ed25519_key>" | ||
}, | ||
"keys": { | ||
"ed25519": "<sender_ed25519_key>" | ||
} | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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We propose to add a new property: `sender_device_keys`, which is a copy of what | ||
the server would return in response to a | ||
[`/keys/query`](https://spec.matrix.org/v1.12/client-server-api/#post_matrixclientv3keysquery) | ||
request, as the device keys for the sender's device. In other words, the | ||
plaintext payload will now look something like: | ||
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```json | ||
{ | ||
"type": "<type of the plaintext event>", | ||
"content": "<content for the plaintext event>", | ||
"sender": "<sender_user_id>", | ||
"recipient": "<recipient_user_id>", | ||
"recipient_keys": { | ||
"ed25519": "<our_ed25519_key>" | ||
}, | ||
"keys": { | ||
"ed25519": "<sender_ed25519_key>" | ||
}, | ||
"sender_device_keys": { | ||
"algorithms": ["<supported>", "<algorithms>"], | ||
"user_id": "<user_id>", | ||
"device_id": "<device_id>", | ||
"keys": { | ||
"ed25519:<device_id>": "<sender_ed25519_key>", | ||
"curve25519:<device_id>": "<sender_curve25519_key>" | ||
}, | ||
"signatures": { | ||
"<user_id>": { | ||
"ed25519:<device_id>": "<device_signature>", | ||
"ed25519:<ssk_id>": "<ssk_signature>", | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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If this property is present, the `keys`.`ed25519` property of the plaintext | ||
payload must be the same as the `sender_device_keys`.`keys`.`ed25519:<DEVICEID>` | ||
property. If they differ, the recipient should discard the event. | ||
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As the `keys` property is now redundant, it may be removed in a future version | ||
of the Matrix specification. | ||
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## Potential issues | ||
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Adding this property will increase the size of the to-device message. We found it | ||
increased the length of a typical encrypted `m.room_key` message from about 1400 to 2400 | ||
bytes (a 70% increase). This will require increased storage on the recipient | ||
homeserver, and increase bandwidth for both senders and recipients. See | ||
[Alternatives](#alternatives) for discussion of mitigation strategies. | ||
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This proposal is not a complete solution. In particular, if the sender resets | ||
their cross-signing keys, and also logs out the sending device, the recipient | ||
still has no way to verify the sending device. The device signature in the Olm | ||
message is meaningless. A full solution would require the recipient to be able | ||
to obtain a history of cross-signing key changes, and to expose that | ||
information to the user; that is left for the future. | ||
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## Alternatives | ||
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### Minor variations | ||
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The `sender_device_keys` property could be added to the cleartext. That is, it could | ||
be added as a property to the `m.room.encrypted` event. This information is | ||
already public, as it is accessible from `/keys/query` (while the device is | ||
logged in), and does not need to be authenticated as it is protected by the | ||
self-signing signature, so it does not seem to need to be encrypted. However, | ||
there seems to be little reason not to encrypt the information. In addition, by | ||
including it in the encrypted payload, it leaves open the possibility of | ||
it replacing the `keys` property, which must be part of the encrypted payload | ||
to prevent an [unknown key-share attack](https://github.com/element-hq/element-web/issues/2215). | ||
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The `sender_device_keys` property could be added to the cleartext by the sender's | ||
homeserver, rather than by the sending client. Possibly within an `unsigned` | ||
property, as that is where properties added by homeservers are customarily | ||
added. It is not clear what advantage there would be to having this | ||
information being added by the client. | ||
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To mitigate the increased size of to-device events under this proposal, the | ||
`sender_device_keys` could be sent only in pre-key messages (Olm messages | ||
with `type: 0` in the `m.room.encrypted` event) — with the rationale that if | ||
the Olm message is a normal (non-pre-key) message, this means that the | ||
recipient has already decrypted a pre-key message that contains the | ||
information, and so does not need to be re-sent the information), or if the | ||
signatures change (for example, if the sender resets their cross-signing keys), | ||
or if the sender has not yet sent their `device_keys`. However, this requires | ||
additional bookkeeping, and it is not clear whether this extra complexity is | ||
worth the reduction in bandwidth. | ||
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### Alternative approach | ||
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A more radical proposal to decrease the overhead in to-device messages is to | ||
instead specify that `/keys/query` must include deleted devices as well as | ||
active ones, so that they can be reliably queried. Since the origin server | ||
might be unreachable at the time the recipient receives the message, such | ||
device lists would need to be cached on the recipient homeserver. | ||
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In other words, this approach would require all homeservers to keep a permanent | ||
record of all devices observed anywhere in the federation, at least for as long | ||
as there are undelivered to-device events from such devices. | ||
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Transparently: we have not significantly explored this approach. We have a | ||
working solution, and it is unclear that the advantages of this alternative | ||
approach outweigh the opportunity cost and delay in rollout of an important | ||
security feature. If, in future, the overhead of including the device keys | ||
in the to-device messages is found to be significant, it would be worth | ||
revisiting this. | ||
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## Security considerations | ||
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If a device is logged out, there is no indication why it was logged out. For | ||
example, an attacker could steal a device and use it send a message. The user, | ||
upon realizing that the device has been stolen, could log out the device, but | ||
the message may still be sent, if the user does not notice the message and | ||
redact it. | ||
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## Unstable prefix | ||
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Until this MSC is accepted, the new property should be named | ||
`org.matrix.msc4147.device_keys`. | ||
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## Dependencies | ||
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None |