FW: [Exim] Secure email->Webmail transaction question

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Autor: Boyle Owen
Data:  
Para: Exim list
Asunto: FW: [Exim] Secure email->Webmail transaction question
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Kevin P. Fleming [mailto:kpfleming@cox.net]
>
>I could very well be mistaken, but I was sure that the encryption only

happened
>on the client end (i.e. the server only decrypted, never encrypted).


You are mistaken. The entire session is encrypted both ways. The client
request causes the server to send it's certificate which contains the
server's public key. The client then generates a session-key, encrypts
it using the public key and sends it to the server. The server decrypts
the session-key using its local private key (which never leaves the
server). Both sides now have a session-key which is unknown to any
snooper. They now use this to encrypt all traffic in each direction.

>I don't think caching has much to do with it, the web sites just don't
>send the full number back on the "order complete" page. I always

thought
>they did that because it wasn't encrypted, but maybe it's just because

they want to
>be extra careful with that information.


The main reason that the server never echoes the credit card number is
that, on a well-designed system, it doesn't actually know it. The server
contains back-end payment software which extracts the encrypted card
number from the packet and sends it directly to the payment gateway.
Thus, the server *never* actually becomes aware of the card number. This
is essential for liability protection - the site operators have to be
able to show, if audited during a fraud investigation, that they could
never have learned the card number.

It would be possible to run a server which did decrypt the card number
but you'd be opening yourself to a terrible liability if one of your
customers complained that their number had been mis-used. You'd never be
able to prove you didn't nick it.

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