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  1. Cloudron Forum
  2. Feature Requests
  3. 2FA for all LDAP apps

2FA for all LDAP apps

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Solved Feature Requests
2fa
47 Posts 12 Posters 10.2k Views 11 Watching
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  • girishG Offline
    girishG Offline
    girish
    Staff
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    This was brought up by @nj in https://forum.cloudron.io/topic/2433/the-real-sso-with as well. I am open to @mehdi 's idea of password;totp but the UX worries me since you have to communicate this to all your users and they will also need to know which apps support this format and which don't.

    mehdiM 1 Reply Last reply
    4
    • girishG girish

      This was brought up by @nj in https://forum.cloudron.io/topic/2433/the-real-sso-with as well. I am open to @mehdi 's idea of password;totp but the UX worries me since you have to communicate this to all your users and they will also need to know which apps support this format and which don't.

      mehdiM Offline
      mehdiM Offline
      mehdi
      App Dev
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      @girish Yeah, the UX would not be great...

      I guess it would be acceptable to allow admins to enable it on a per-app basis, with lots of warnings that they should warn their users. Some people may need it for compliance reason.

      I actually used a system that worked like this once. It's weird at first but you get used to it pretty quickly

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • marcusquinnM Offline
        marcusquinnM Offline
        marcusquinn
        wrote on last edited by marcusquinn
        #9

        OK, I see what you're all saying, and I'm a fan of simple solutions, so I think there's lots of good reasoning here. Save your time and let's put the thread on ice. I'll think about it app by app instead as some should already have the option and I'd not looked into that until exploring the global solution discussion.

        Another thought for anyone else following this thread, and it's something I might do. Not 100% secure but might be safer:

        1. Issue Bitwarden login credentials, and enforce 2FA there.
        2. Issue all other credentials (with or without 2FA as appropriate) through Bitwarden, using shared credentials with the password hidden feature.

        I know the hidden password isn't completely secure from javascript spying - but it would help protect against user phishing as a vector as the users wouldn't know their own non-2FA credentials to be able to enter them in any other URL or place than Bitwarden will submit them to as the URL from the credentials shared.

        It's a teeny bit more setup admin that makes Bitwarden installation and login essential to being able to login to other apps - but Bitwarden can have 2FA enforced.

        It doesn't protect from brute-forcing but either the DNS proxy (Cloudflare etc) or the server firewall should make that inefficient and uneconomical without a large IP pool.

        Noting some on here have medical clients, hopefully this helps.

        It might also help with that usability question on remembering if the login username is a username or an email address.

        Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
        Development https://brandlight.org
        Life https://marcusquinn.com

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • marcusquinnM Offline
          marcusquinnM Offline
          marcusquinn
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          The above solution could be a Cloudron Feature too if the Bitwarden API were able to receive and update the Cloudron user's LDAP credentials and share them with their main Cloudron email account with a selected Bitwarden instance.

          https://bitwarden.com/help/api/

          Maybe the kind of thing @lonk would enjoy making a 200 comment thread on 😂

          Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
          Development https://brandlight.org
          Life https://marcusquinn.com

          LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
          3
          • robiR Offline
            robiR Offline
            robi
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            or we wait and see what happens with Oauth3 and CapTP 😏

            Conscious tech

            marcusquinnM 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • robiR robi

              or we wait and see what happens with Oauth3 and CapTP 😏

              marcusquinnM Offline
              marcusquinnM Offline
              marcusquinn
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              @robi waiting is never a luxury in my business I'm afraid.

              We have 20+ staff working our help-desk every day, and they do receive constant phishing attempts, currently all their systems are protected with 2FA systems and a password manager policy for entering credentials in any logins.

              The cost of one systems breach could be tens to hundreds of thousands or total business failure, in addition to annual PCI Compliance audits, so the luxury of waiting for security isn't an option when the numbers and risk isn't an option for us at least.

              The password manager and good password practice workaround, coupled with a good firewall setup is adequate, it's just something that doesn't happen without a personal or business policy to make that so, hence thinking through options so that the Cloudron apps could have that policy by design.

              So, I'm not saying the apps are insecure, just that social engineering and personal computer security are more vulnerable without 2FA. Nothing's perfect but we can still keep the odds in our favour with at least a policy and awareness.

              Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
              Development https://brandlight.org
              Life https://marcusquinn.com

              1 Reply Last reply
              2
              • robiR Offline
                robiR Offline
                robi
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                I hear you, not the spirit of my comment. 🙂

                I've been impressed lately with the WP WAF plugins like WP Cerber that do a good job to notice, escalate and block nefarious IPs probing to get in.

                Cloudron could benefit from something similar at the system level.

                fail2ban is ok, but could use a dashboard and configurator as an Cloudron App.

                Conscious tech

                1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • marcusquinnM marcusquinn

                  The above solution could be a Cloudron Feature too if the Bitwarden API were able to receive and update the Cloudron user's LDAP credentials and share them with their main Cloudron email account with a selected Bitwarden instance.

                  https://bitwarden.com/help/api/

                  Maybe the kind of thing @lonk would enjoy making a 200 comment thread on 😂

                  LonkleL Offline
                  LonkleL Offline
                  Lonkle
                  wrote on last edited by Lonkle
                  #14

                  @marcusquinn Haha, the only reason for that one million comment thread was because I constantly needed to reference back. I've actually got box down pretty well. And, hey, now a random live blog of me doing 1000 things wrong, and finally getting 1002nd attempt right exists in the world! I'll always get to go back and say "hey, that was my first attempt at learning docker, and cloudron." ☺️

                  What are the benefits of this Bitwarden connection with Cloudron?

                  marcusquinnM 1 Reply Last reply
                  3
                  • LonkleL Lonkle

                    @marcusquinn Haha, the only reason for that one million comment thread was because I constantly needed to reference back. I've actually got box down pretty well. And, hey, now a random live blog of me doing 1000 things wrong, and finally getting 1002nd attempt right exists in the world! I'll always get to go back and say "hey, that was my first attempt at learning docker, and cloudron." ☺️

                    What are the benefits of this Bitwarden connection with Cloudron?

                    marcusquinnM Offline
                    marcusquinnM Offline
                    marcusquinn
                    wrote on last edited by marcusquinn
                    #15

                    @Lonk Based on my policy suggestion above, assuming Bitwarden is installed and 2FA enforced:

                    Current flow:

                    1. Create a Cloudron User.
                    2. Create a Bitwarden User.
                    3. Create an Organisation called Users.
                    4. Create a Collection for each User, including just that User, with Hide Password and Read Only enabled settings.
                    5. Create a Bitwarden Login record containing said User Cloudron LDAP Login credentials.
                    6. Share said record with said User Collection.
                    7. Add all URLs to all allowed Cloudron Apps to said record.
                    8. User can now only login to those Cloudron Apps using the Bitwarden extension and can't see or know their Cloudron LDAP password as it is hidden and read-only..

                    Proposed flow:

                    1. Have a setting for each App that selects an available Bitwarden instance.
                    2. Complete the above steps from Cloudron to Bitwarden API.
                    3. Relax.

                    Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
                    Development https://brandlight.org
                    Life https://marcusquinn.com

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    3
                    • LonkleL Offline
                      LonkleL Offline
                      Lonkle
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      Let me mull this over and look into Bitwarden and I'll get back to you. 🤔

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • mehdiM Offline
                        mehdiM Offline
                        mehdi
                        App Dev
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        Honestly, I do not like this idea.

                        It would be great to have it in an external script or something. But integrated into the Cloudron platform ? ... It seems too much of a hack, in my opinion.

                        fbartelsF 1 Reply Last reply
                        3
                        • mehdiM mehdi

                          Honestly, I do not like this idea.

                          It would be great to have it in an external script or something. But integrated into the Cloudron platform ? ... It seems too much of a hack, in my opinion.

                          fbartelsF Offline
                          fbartelsF Offline
                          fbartels
                          App Dev
                          wrote on last edited by fbartels
                          #18

                          I agree with @mehdi. That workflow also comes with the downside that while the actual owner of the account does not know his/her own password, you (as the admin) actually now it yourself.

                          Rather enforce secure passwords and rotate them regularly (in addition to encouraging users to use password managers).

                          mehdiM 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • fbartelsF fbartels

                            I agree with @mehdi. That workflow also comes with the downside that while the actual owner of the account does not know his/her own password, you (as the admin) actually now it yourself.

                            Rather enforce secure passwords and rotate them regularly (in addition to encouraging users to use password managers).

                            mehdiM Offline
                            mehdiM Offline
                            mehdi
                            App Dev
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            @fbartels said in 2FA for all LDAP apps:

                            and rotate them regularly

                            (Forcing password rotation when there has been no indication of compromise has actually been proven experimentally to lower security, rather than enhance it : if encourages users to chose simpler passwords, because they're gonna have to remember more passwords)

                            girishG 1 Reply Last reply
                            5
                            • mehdiM mehdi

                              @fbartels said in 2FA for all LDAP apps:

                              and rotate them regularly

                              (Forcing password rotation when there has been no indication of compromise has actually been proven experimentally to lower security, rather than enhance it : if encourages users to chose simpler passwords, because they're gonna have to remember more passwords)

                              girishG Offline
                              girishG Offline
                              girish
                              Staff
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              @mehdi said in 2FA for all LDAP apps:

                              Forcing password rotation when there has been no indication of compromise has actually been proven experimentally to lower security

                              This seems to be one of those counter-intuitive ideas. I had no idea it actually lowers security.

                              LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
                              3
                              • girishG girish

                                @mehdi said in 2FA for all LDAP apps:

                                Forcing password rotation when there has been no indication of compromise has actually been proven experimentally to lower security

                                This seems to be one of those counter-intuitive ideas. I had no idea it actually lowers security.

                                LonkleL Offline
                                LonkleL Offline
                                Lonkle
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                I never realized it, but on sites that make me change the password periodically, I totally do keep making them simpler because it's confusing even with password managers cause they mess up saving passwords a lot on password reset pages.

                                marcusquinnM 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • LonkleL Lonkle

                                  I never realized it, but on sites that make me change the password periodically, I totally do keep making them simpler because it's confusing even with password managers cause they mess up saving passwords a lot on password reset pages.

                                  marcusquinnM Offline
                                  marcusquinnM Offline
                                  marcusquinn
                                  wrote on last edited by marcusquinn
                                  #22

                                  @Lonk yeah, I hate those forced password changing policies, they are a security risk in themselves as they just increase the likelihood of a keystroke logger being able to capture.

                                  I wrote more on the subject of password security for our team policy here:

                                  https://brandlight.org/h/policies/password-security-policy/

                                  And my thoughts on Security here:

                                  https://www.marcusquinn.com/security/

                                  Hopefully something of interest there to those with similar responsibilities for data security.

                                  Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
                                  Development https://brandlight.org
                                  Life https://marcusquinn.com

                                  LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • marcusquinnM marcusquinn

                                    @Lonk yeah, I hate those forced password changing policies, they are a security risk in themselves as they just increase the likelihood of a keystroke logger being able to capture.

                                    I wrote more on the subject of password security for our team policy here:

                                    https://brandlight.org/h/policies/password-security-policy/

                                    And my thoughts on Security here:

                                    https://www.marcusquinn.com/security/

                                    Hopefully something of interest there to those with similar responsibilities for data security.

                                    LonkleL Offline
                                    LonkleL Offline
                                    Lonkle
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    @marcusquinn Security has become my newest point of interest in the programming world - amazing how ridiculously insecure things were even 15 years ago.

                                    marcusquinnM mehdiM 2 Replies Last reply
                                    2
                                    • LonkleL Lonkle

                                      @marcusquinn Security has become my newest point of interest in the programming world - amazing how ridiculously insecure things were even 15 years ago.

                                      marcusquinnM Offline
                                      marcusquinnM Offline
                                      marcusquinn
                                      wrote on last edited by marcusquinn
                                      #24

                                      @Lonk agreed, and misinformation and information-overload cause a lot of vulnerabilities for people that don't know what we do, and even we find difficult to truly solve. Steps in the right direction though.

                                      Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
                                      Development https://brandlight.org
                                      Life https://marcusquinn.com

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • marcusquinnM Offline
                                        marcusquinnM Offline
                                        marcusquinn
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        What most people don't realise is that all the add-ons, extensions and social-logins would once have been considered trojans for the snooping capabilities they have.

                                        I mentioned "coffee machine" on a phone call to a friend, hadn't typed it in anywhere or searched anything. Next time I look at Twitter the first ad is for a Nespresso machine.

                                        So, it doesn't matter how good my security is, we all rely on the security of everyone we are connected to.

                                        Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
                                        Development https://brandlight.org
                                        Life https://marcusquinn.com

                                        jdaviescoatesJ mehdiM 2 Replies Last reply
                                        0
                                        • marcusquinnM marcusquinn

                                          What most people don't realise is that all the add-ons, extensions and social-logins would once have been considered trojans for the snooping capabilities they have.

                                          I mentioned "coffee machine" on a phone call to a friend, hadn't typed it in anywhere or searched anything. Next time I look at Twitter the first ad is for a Nespresso machine.

                                          So, it doesn't matter how good my security is, we all rely on the security of everyone we are connected to.

                                          jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                                          jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                                          jdaviescoates
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          @marcusquinn said in 2FA for all LDAP apps:

                                          Next time I look at Twitter the first ad is for a Nespresso machine.

                                          I only ever look at Twitter through Firefox with ublock origin installed, so don't see ads on there.

                                          The UX is a bit shit in the mobile browser (especially since recent Firefox update, ironically), but that helps me to use it less on my mobile! 😛

                                          I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

                                          marcusquinnM 1 Reply Last reply
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