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Peter Mortensen
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This is a very deep problem in Unicode, and stripping zero-width characters doesn't get you very far in fixing it. The above Swift homograph-attack is easily generated without any zero-widths:

let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER А

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321

There are many homographs in Unicode, and even more near-homographs. Using homographs is an easier and less detectable version of this attack, since they don't create the quirky IDE behaviors zero-widths do. If this were a fruitful attack, we should see it in homograph attacks. This isn't to say it's impossible to exploit or useless to mitigate, but when attackers fail to widely use a class of attack that has been known for years, there's a reason. Homograph exploitation of domain names is a major problem, so it isn't a case that attackers are unaware of the possibilities.

Are there any known cases of successful homograph attacks on SOStack Overflow, coding forums, or other coding sites? "No one has been caught doing it" isn't sufficient reason by itself not to employ a mitigation, but if someone has successfully pulled this off, then that definitely changes things.

Reducing SOStack Overflow questions to Latin-1 would make a wide variety of Unicode questions impossible to ask. (Not to mention the impact on askers who use non-Latin identifiers and comments in their code. I often encounter non-English sample code, and that's fine IMO.) I believe that's a non-starter.

Stripping zero-width characters in the markdownMarkdown may be acceptable, since they can make the question harder to understand, and it is often better to express questions about them with visible names (like "ZWJ"). But I've answered questions where the problem turned out to be weird stuff in the string that I had to paste into xxdxxd to figure out. In any case, this isn't much of a security mitigation because homographs are so much easier.

A banner indicating that the post includes non-Latin-1 characters, and a mechanism for highlighting all of them (and exposing any that are zero-width) would provide some security benefit IMO, but it feels awkward, and somewhat hostile to non-native-English speakers. I don't recommend it, but at least it could be effective.

This is a very deep problem in Unicode, and stripping zero-width characters doesn't get you very far in fixing it. The above Swift homograph-attack is easily generated without any zero-widths:

let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER А

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321

There are many homographs in Unicode, and even more near-homographs. Using homographs is an easier and less detectable version of this attack, since they don't create the quirky IDE behaviors zero-widths do. If this were a fruitful attack, we should see it in homograph attacks. This isn't to say it's impossible to exploit or useless to mitigate, but when attackers fail to widely use a class of attack that has been known for years, there's a reason. Homograph exploitation of domain names is a major problem, so it isn't a case that attackers are unaware of the possibilities.

Are there any known cases of successful homograph attacks on SO, coding forums, or other coding sites? "No one has been caught doing it" isn't sufficient reason by itself not to employ a mitigation, but if someone has successfully pulled this off, then that definitely changes things.

Reducing SO questions to Latin-1 would make a wide variety of Unicode questions impossible to ask. (Not to mention the impact on askers who use non-Latin identifiers and comments in their code. I often encounter non-English sample code, and that's fine IMO.) I believe that's a non-starter.

Stripping zero-width characters in the markdown may be acceptable, since they can make the question harder to understand, and it is often better to express questions about them with visible names (like "ZWJ"). But I've answered questions where the problem turned out to be weird stuff in the string that I had to paste into xxd to figure out. In any case, this isn't much of a security mitigation because homographs are so much easier.

A banner indicating that the post includes non-Latin-1 characters, and a mechanism for highlighting all of them (and exposing any that are zero-width) would provide some security benefit IMO, but it feels awkward, and somewhat hostile to non-native-English speakers. I don't recommend it, but at least it could be effective.

This is a very deep problem in Unicode, and stripping zero-width characters doesn't get you very far in fixing it. The above Swift homograph-attack is easily generated without any zero-widths:

let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER А

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321

There are many homographs in Unicode, and even more near-homographs. Using homographs is an easier and less detectable version of this attack, since they don't create the quirky IDE behaviors zero-widths do. If this were a fruitful attack, we should see it in homograph attacks. This isn't to say it's impossible to exploit or useless to mitigate, but when attackers fail to widely use a class of attack that has been known for years, there's a reason. Homograph exploitation of domain names is a major problem, so it isn't a case that attackers are unaware of the possibilities.

Are there any known cases of successful homograph attacks on Stack Overflow, coding forums, or other coding sites? "No one has been caught doing it" isn't sufficient reason by itself not to employ a mitigation, but if someone has successfully pulled this off, then that definitely changes things.

Reducing Stack Overflow questions to Latin-1 would make a wide variety of Unicode questions impossible to ask. (Not to mention the impact on askers who use non-Latin identifiers and comments in their code. I often encounter non-English sample code, and that's fine IMO.) I believe that's a non-starter.

Stripping zero-width characters in the Markdown may be acceptable, since they can make the question harder to understand, and it is often better to express questions about them with visible names (like "ZWJ"). But I've answered questions where the problem turned out to be weird stuff in the string that I had to paste into xxd to figure out. In any case, this isn't much of a security mitigation because homographs are so much easier.

A banner indicating that the post includes non-Latin-1 characters, and a mechanism for highlighting all of them (and exposing any that are zero-width) would provide some security benefit IMO, but it feels awkward, and somewhat hostile to non-native-English speakers. I don't recommend it, but at least it could be effective.

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iBug
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This is a very deep problem in Unicode, and stripping zero-width characters doesn't get you very far in fixing it. The above Swift homograph-attack is easily generated without any zero-widths:

let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER A

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321
let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER А

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321

There are many homographs in Unicode, and even more near-homographs. Using homographs is an easier and less detectable version of this attack, since they don't create the quirky IDE behaviors zero-widths do. If this were a fruitful attack, we should see it in homograph attacks. This isn't to say it's impossible to exploit or useless to mitigate, but when attackers fail to widely use a class of attack that has been known for years, there's a reason. Homograph exploitation of domain names is a major problem, so it isn't a case that attackers are unaware of the possibilities.

Are there any known cases of successful homograph attacks on SO, coding forums, or other coding sites? "No one has been caught doing it" isn't sufficient reason by itself not to employ a mitigation, but if someone has successfully pulled this off, then that definitely changes things.

Reducing SO questions to Latin-1 would make a wide variety of Unicode questions impossible to ask. (Not to mention the impact on askers who use non-Latin identifiers and comments in their code. I often encounter non-English sample code, and that's fine IMO.) I believe that's a non-starter.

Stripping zero-width characters in the markdown may be acceptable, since they can make the question harder to understand, and it is often better to express questions about them with visible names (like "ZWJ"). But I've answered questions where the problem turned out to be weird stuff in the string that I had to paste into xxd to figure out. In any case, this isn't much of a security mitigation because homographs are so much easier.

A banner indicating that the post includes non-Latin-1 characters, and a mechanism for highlighting all of them (and exposing any that are zero-width) would provide some security benefit IMO, but it feels awkward, and somewhat hostile to non-native-English speakers. I don't recommend it, but at least it could be effective.

This is a very deep problem in Unicode, and stripping zero-width characters doesn't get you very far in fixing it. The above Swift homograph-attack is easily generated without any zero-widths:

let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER A

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321

There are many homographs in Unicode, and even more near-homographs. Using homographs is an easier and less detectable version of this attack, since they don't create the quirky IDE behaviors zero-widths do. If this were a fruitful attack, we should see it in homograph attacks. This isn't to say it's impossible to exploit or useless to mitigate, but when attackers fail to widely use a class of attack that has been known for years, there's a reason. Homograph exploitation of domain names is a major problem, so it isn't a case that attackers are unaware of the possibilities.

Are there any known cases of successful homograph attacks on SO, coding forums, or other coding sites? "No one has been caught doing it" isn't sufficient reason by itself not to employ a mitigation, but if someone has successfully pulled this off, then that definitely changes things.

Reducing SO questions to Latin-1 would make a wide variety of Unicode questions impossible to ask. (Not to mention the impact on askers who use non-Latin identifiers and comments in their code. I often encounter non-English sample code, and that's fine IMO.) I believe that's a non-starter.

Stripping zero-width characters in the markdown may be acceptable, since they can make the question harder to understand, and it is often better to express questions about them with visible names (like "ZWJ"). But I've answered questions where the problem turned out to be weird stuff in the string that I had to paste into xxd to figure out. In any case, this isn't much of a security mitigation because homographs are so much easier.

A banner indicating that the post includes non-Latin-1 characters, and a mechanism for highlighting all of them (and exposing any that are zero-width) would provide some security benefit IMO, but it feels awkward, and somewhat hostile to non-native-English speakers. I don't recommend it, but at least it could be effective.

This is a very deep problem in Unicode, and stripping zero-width characters doesn't get you very far in fixing it. The above Swift homograph-attack is easily generated without any zero-widths:

let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER А

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321

There are many homographs in Unicode, and even more near-homographs. Using homographs is an easier and less detectable version of this attack, since they don't create the quirky IDE behaviors zero-widths do. If this were a fruitful attack, we should see it in homograph attacks. This isn't to say it's impossible to exploit or useless to mitigate, but when attackers fail to widely use a class of attack that has been known for years, there's a reason. Homograph exploitation of domain names is a major problem, so it isn't a case that attackers are unaware of the possibilities.

Are there any known cases of successful homograph attacks on SO, coding forums, or other coding sites? "No one has been caught doing it" isn't sufficient reason by itself not to employ a mitigation, but if someone has successfully pulled this off, then that definitely changes things.

Reducing SO questions to Latin-1 would make a wide variety of Unicode questions impossible to ask. (Not to mention the impact on askers who use non-Latin identifiers and comments in their code. I often encounter non-English sample code, and that's fine IMO.) I believe that's a non-starter.

Stripping zero-width characters in the markdown may be acceptable, since they can make the question harder to understand, and it is often better to express questions about them with visible names (like "ZWJ"). But I've answered questions where the problem turned out to be weird stuff in the string that I had to paste into xxd to figure out. In any case, this isn't much of a security mitigation because homographs are so much easier.

A banner indicating that the post includes non-Latin-1 characters, and a mechanism for highlighting all of them (and exposing any that are zero-width) would provide some security benefit IMO, but it feels awkward, and somewhat hostile to non-native-English speakers. I don't recommend it, but at least it could be effective.

Source Link
Rob Napier
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This is a very deep problem in Unicode, and stripping zero-width characters doesn't get you very far in fixing it. The above Swift homograph-attack is easily generated without any zero-widths:

let foo = 111111111
print("foo = \(foo)")
let bar = 111111111
print("bar = \(bar)")
let bаr = 1   // How is that legal? LATIN SMALL LETTER A != CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER A

foo * bаr  // 12345678987654321

There are many homographs in Unicode, and even more near-homographs. Using homographs is an easier and less detectable version of this attack, since they don't create the quirky IDE behaviors zero-widths do. If this were a fruitful attack, we should see it in homograph attacks. This isn't to say it's impossible to exploit or useless to mitigate, but when attackers fail to widely use a class of attack that has been known for years, there's a reason. Homograph exploitation of domain names is a major problem, so it isn't a case that attackers are unaware of the possibilities.

Are there any known cases of successful homograph attacks on SO, coding forums, or other coding sites? "No one has been caught doing it" isn't sufficient reason by itself not to employ a mitigation, but if someone has successfully pulled this off, then that definitely changes things.

Reducing SO questions to Latin-1 would make a wide variety of Unicode questions impossible to ask. (Not to mention the impact on askers who use non-Latin identifiers and comments in their code. I often encounter non-English sample code, and that's fine IMO.) I believe that's a non-starter.

Stripping zero-width characters in the markdown may be acceptable, since they can make the question harder to understand, and it is often better to express questions about them with visible names (like "ZWJ"). But I've answered questions where the problem turned out to be weird stuff in the string that I had to paste into xxd to figure out. In any case, this isn't much of a security mitigation because homographs are so much easier.

A banner indicating that the post includes non-Latin-1 characters, and a mechanism for highlighting all of them (and exposing any that are zero-width) would provide some security benefit IMO, but it feels awkward, and somewhat hostile to non-native-English speakers. I don't recommend it, but at least it could be effective.