OSEC

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From: AA Webmaster (webmasteraa.com)
Date: Tue Sep 18 2001 - 07:41:33 CDT

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    Hello Devi and Chris,

    Thank you for your interest in American Airlines web site and the
    security we use to transfer confidential customer information.

    Most browsers indicate that a page is secure by one or more of the
    following methods:

    - A picture of a key on the status bar. The key may appear to be broken
    when the page is not secure.
    - A picture of a padlock on the status bar. If the padlock is closed,
    the page is secure. If the padlock is open, it is not secure.
    - A blue line across the top of the secured page.

    ** Although all confidential information sent and received at our site
    is transferred using Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol, your browser
    will not display a key, padlock or blue line to indicate that the page
    is secure. **

    Our site will access secure servers for user confidentiality only when
    sensitive information is being transmitted such as site login, user
    profile updates, travel planning payment, AAdvantage account
    transactions, etc. And, since our site uses frames to display
    information, only the frame content which contains confidential
    information is secure. Most browsers are unable to detect individual
    frames which contain this information and is the reason your browser is
    unable to detect this secure transfer of information.

    To prevent unauthorized access, maintain data accuracy, and ensure the
    correct use of information, we have put in place appropriate physical,
    electronic, and managerial procedures to safeguard and secure the
    information we collect online.
                             
    We also participate in the Council of Better Business Bureaus'
    BBBOnline® Privacy Program, and comply with all the BBBOnline privacy
    standards. Further information about this program is available at
    http://www.bbbonline.org.

    If you wish to automatically be notified when entering or leaving a
    secure server at our site, you may modify your browser settings to alert
    you when these actions occur. Please contact your Internet Service
    Provider or browser manufacturer if you need assistance.

    Sincerely,
    Melissa Till
    AA.com Webmaster Team

    Original Message Follows:
    -------------------------

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Dwight Mann
    Sent: Monday, September 17, 2001 3:59 PM
    To: DFW Technology
    Subject: FW: aa.com not encrypting customer transaction data

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Chris Fairbourne [mailto:chris.fairbournecamsystems.com]
    Sent: Monday, September 17, 2001 12:39 PM
    To: 'bugtraqsecurityfocus.com'
    Subject: aa.com not encrypting customer transaction data

    Looks like aa.com (American Airlines) is NOT encrypting customer data
    for
    purchasing e-tickets. Hopefully this isn't still the case by the time
    this
    posts. This hold true for both Advantage login and non-members as well.
    At
    no time did I get a redirect to an SSL server for my session.

    Taking a peek at the "Passenger Details" page source, no where do you
    find
    "https" or ":443", hmm. Next I make a phony submission and low and
    behold
    this is what I grabbed: " f o r m % C I _ C r e d i t C a r d T o U s e
    _ C
    a
     r d N u m b e r " v a l u e = " 4 3 2 3 5 0 1 9 8 3 5 1 9 9 9 9 "

    I've made serveral phone calls to aa.com and generated a few e-mail.
    I can't convince them I'm wrong, so I bring it to this forum.

     

    Chris Fairbourne
    pgpkey: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x371E73BB
    fingerprint: 7AE3DCC82215697A0C3F61C4968FCFDB371E73BB