TechCrunch News 10月07日 23:10
印度税务部门修复税收门户数据泄露漏洞
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印度政府税务部门近日成功修复了其在线收入税申报门户网站上存在的一项安全漏洞。该漏洞在9月被安全研究人员发现,允许登录用户通过简单替换网络请求中的PAN(永久账户号码)来访问其他纳税人的敏感个人和财务信息,包括姓名、地址、联系方式、出生日期、银行账户详情以及Aadhaar号码等。此漏洞属于不安全的直接对象引用(IDOR)类型,易于被利用。安全研究人员在发现后立即通知了印度计算机应急响应小组(CERT-In),并在10月2日确认漏洞已被修复。尽管漏洞已被修复,但目前尚不清楚该漏洞存在多久,以及是否有恶意行为者曾利用该漏洞访问过数据,受影响的用户数量也未明确。

🚨 印度税收门户存在安全漏洞:安全研究人员在9月发现,印度收入税申报门户存在一个允许未授权访问敏感纳税人数据的安全漏洞。该漏洞属于不安全的直接对象引用(IDOR)类型,意味着后端服务器未能充分验证用户访问权限。

👥 广泛的个人信息泄露:该漏洞可能导致包括全名、家庭住址、电子邮件地址、出生日期、电话号码、银行账户详情以及Aadhaar号码在内的个人和财务信息被泄露。受影响的不仅是已报税的个人,还包括尚未报税的公民以及注册公司。

🛠️ 漏洞已修复并已通报:安全研究人员在发现漏洞后,已于10月2日确认其已被修复。他们也及时将此安全隐患通报给了印度的计算机应急响应小组(CERT-In),该部门已着手处理。尽管漏洞已修复,但潜在的泄露范围和时间仍待进一步明确。

🔍 发现过程与技术细节:研究人员在填写个人所得税申报时,通过替换网络请求中的PAN(永久账户号码)在门户网站上发现了该漏洞。利用Postman、Burp Suite等公开工具或浏览器开发者工具,并知晓他人PAN号即可进行攻击。

❓ 未决问题与潜在风险:目前尚不清楚该漏洞存在了多长时间,以及是否有恶意行为者利用该漏洞窃取了数据。印度收入税申报门户拥有超过1.35亿注册用户,受影响的用户数量可能非常庞大,潜在风险不容忽视。

The Indian government’s tax authority has fixed a security flaw in its income tax filing portal that was exposing sensitive taxpayers’ data, TechCrunch has exclusively learned and confirmed with authorities.

The flaw, discovered in September by a pair of security researchers Akshay CS and “Viral,” allowed anyone who was logged into the income tax department’s e-Filing portal to access up-to-date personal and financial data of other people.

The exposed data included full names, home addresses and email addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, and bank account details of people who pay taxes on their income in India. The data also exposed citizens’ Aadhaar number, a unique government-issued identifier used as proof of identity and for accessing government services.

TechCrunch verified the data to the best of its ability by granting permission to the researchers to look up this reporter’s records on the portal.

The security researchers confirmed to TechCrunch on October 2 that the vulnerability was fixed. Given the risk to the public, TechCrunch withheld publishing this story until the security researchers confirmed that the vulnerability can no longer be exploited.

Representatives for the Indian Income Tax Department acknowledged our email requesting comment, but did not answer our questions by press time. The Income Tax Department did not present any objections to our publishing this story.

The security researchers Akshay CS and “Viral” told TechCrunch that they discovered the vulnerability while filing their recent income tax return on the government website.

Residents of India are required to file their annual earnings to calculate the taxes they owe to the Indian government.

The researchers found that when they signed into the portal using their Permanent Account Number (PAN), an official document issued by the Indian income tax department, they could view anyone else’s sensitive financial data by swapping out their PAN for another PAN in the network request as the web page loads.

This could be done using publicly available tools like Postman or Burp Suite (or using the web browser’s in-built developer tools) and with knowledge of someone else’s PAN, the researchers told TechCrunch.

The bug was exploitable by anyone who was logged-in to the tax portal because the Indian income tax department’s back-end servers were not properly checking who was allowed to access a person’s sensitive data. This class of vulnerability is known as an insecure direct object reference, or IDOR, a common and simple flaw that governments have warned is easy to exploit and can result in large-scale data breaches.

“This is an extremely low hanging thing, but one that has a very severe consequence,” the researchers told TechCrunch.

In addition to the data of individuals, the researchers said that the bug also exposed data associated with companies who were registered with the e-Filing portal.

TechCrunch also verified that the bug exposed data on individuals who have yet to file their income tax returns this year. We confirmed this by asking a person who had not yet filed their tax returns for their permission to have the researchers look up their information using the portal bug.

The security researchers alerted India’s computer emergency readiness team, or CERT-In, to the security flaw soon after their discovery, but were not provided with a timeline for the fix.

When contacted by TechCrunch on September 30, a CERT-In representative said the Income Tax Department was already working to fix the vulnerability.

The Indian Ministry of Finance did not return TechCrunch’s request for comment. After reaching out to the Income Tax Department regarding the vulnerability, the Director General of Systems acknowledged receipt of TechCrunch’s email on October 1, but did not comment further.

It remains unclear how long the vulnerability has existed or whether any malicious actors have accessed the exposed data. CERT-In did not respond to these questions when asked by TechCrunch.

The exact number of users impacted by the exposed data is also unclear. The Income Tax Department’s portal lists more than 135 million registered users, and over 76 million users filed income tax returns in the financial year 2024-25, per public data available on the portal itself.

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印度税务 数据泄露 安全漏洞 IDOR 收入税 Indian Tax Data Breach Security Vulnerability Income Tax
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