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Re: A WfW security curiosity (possibly another security hole)



On Thu, 18 Jan 1996 [email protected] wrote:

> When WfW is installed, it creates a file in the Windows directory called
> WFWSYS.CFG.  This is a standard Windows password file and may be decrypted with
> the password "23skidoo" (note that this is lowercase, since it's passed to the
> .PWL-handling code at a level which bypasses the usual password case smashing.
> The mangled 32-bit form which is passed to the RC4 key setup routine is { 0x67,
> 0x6F, 0xE3, 0x81 }).
>  
> WFWSYS.CFG seems to be mostly identical for the few copies I could get to, and
> WfW networking won't work without it.  Decrypting the file doesn't seem to give
> anything useful, the string "SYSTEM" and what looks like a few 8 or 16-numbers. 
> I don't know enough about how WfW networking works, but my (very vague) guess
> is that it contains some sort of cookie to uniquely ID each machine for
> resource sharing over a network.  If it does then it it's (yet another) pretty
> serious security hole, since it's encrypted with a fixed password and seems to
> be mostly identical over multiple machines.  OTOH it may be something to do
> with serial numbers so you can't install the same copy of WfW on multiple
> machines on a LAN.
>  
> Can anyone shed more light on it?
>  
> Peter.
>  
> 

This is the file used by admincfg.exe (on WFW3.11 disk 8). This file
contains "security" settings, such as whether or not to cache passwords
on disk (*.PWL files). 

There is no feature in WFW to prevent use of one copy on multiple
machines on a lan.

In terms of security, yes, the whole of Windows Networking is a bad joke.

(An interesting aside, it is possible to get a WfW "security" error
on start-up by having subst drives - weird, eh?)

_____________________________________________________________________
Don Gaffney
Engineering, Mathematics & Business Administration Computer Facility
University of Vermont
237 Votey Building
Burlington, VT  05405
(802) 656-8490
Fax: (802) 656-8802