Firefox to Display Error When Encountering SHA-1 Certificates

Starting in Firefox 51, Mozilla’s web browser will display an error when a SHA-1 certificate is encountered that chains up to a root certificate included in Mozilla’s CA Certificate Program.

Designed over two decades ago, the SHA-1 algorithm has become an important Internet security standard used in HTTPS connections, but recent research has revealed that the cost of breaking the SHA-1 cryptographic hash function is lower than previously estimated.

As a result, many tech companies decided to sunset the algorithm, with Google first announcing such plans in Sept. 2014. Last year, the company revealed that it might start rejecting SHA-1 certificates this year, sooner than initially intended.

Although Mozilla announced similar plans last year, in January, after Firefox 43 began rejecting new SSL certificates that use the SHA-1 cryptographic hash function, they re-enabled the support after evaluating the impact on users. In February, the company allowed Symantec to issue nine new SHA-1-based SSL certificates to payment processor Worldpay.

Starting with Feb. 2017, the Microsoft Edge and Internet Explorer browsers will both start blocking SHA-1 signed TLS certificates, the tech giant announced several months ago.

Beginning Jan. 2017, Firefox 51 will show “an overridable “Untrusted Connection” error whenever a SHA-1 certificate is encountered that chains up to a root certificate included in Mozilla’s CA Certificate Program,” Mozilla says now. The company also notes that SHA-1 certificates that chain up to manually-imported root certificates will continue to be supported by default, so that enterprises could continue using SHA-1 certificates.

The issuance of SHA-1 certificates mostly halted for the public web in January this year, and new certificates have adopted more secure algorithms, the company says. Thus, the use of SHA-1 on the Internet dropped from 3.5% to 0.8%, Firefox Telemetry data shows.

Mozilla said that it would enable the deprecation of SHA-1 SSL certificates for some of its Firefox 51 Beta users (the beta phase will start November 7), “to evaluate the impact of the policy on real-world usage.” Once Firefox 51 arrives in Jan 2017, the company will disable support for SHA-1 certificates from publicly-trusted certificate authorities for a small subset of users, but will include more users afterwards, eventually completely disabling the algorithm. 

view counter
image
Ionut Arghire is an international correspondent for SecurityWeek.
Previous Columns by Ionut Arghire:
Tags:
Original author: Ionut Arghire