Internet DRAFT - draft-aeble-ooo-replies

draft-aeble-ooo-replies





Network Working Group                                            A. Eble
Internet-Draft                                                      fsck
Expires: March 26, 2004                               September 26, 2003


             Security Best Practices: Out-of-Office Replies
                       draft-aeble-ooo-replies-00

Status of this Memo

   This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
   all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.

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   This Internet-Draft will expire on March 26, 2004.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

   Email has come to be the single most important application of modern
   Information Technology. It is often considered business critical.
   Most current email systems have means for automated replies to
   incoming messages. These are mostly used for so-called out-of-office
   replies or OoO-replies for short.

   This document discusses problems of out-of-office replies and
   suggests best practices and controls that should be put in place.








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1. Terminology

   This document occasionally uses terms that appear in capital letters.
   When the terms "MUST", "SHOULD", "RECOMMENDED", "MUST NOT", "SHOULD
   NOT", and "MAY" appear capitalized, they are being used to indicate
   particular requirements of this specification. A discussion of the
   meanings of these terms appears in RFC2119.

   In this document, the sender of the original message is called sender
   or originator and the recipient of said message addressee or
   recipient. The out-of-office reply will then originate at the
   recipient's side.







































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2. Introduction

   Email is the most prominent application in information technology.
   Many companies rely on its timely delivery, the asynchronicity of the
   medium and the anonymity especially compared to the telephone. Since
   people expect an email to be delivered almost immediately even to
   addressees on the other side of the world, it is singularly annoying
   to many not to receive a reply to a message declared urgent. Thus,
   modern email systems offer the capability of so-called out-of-office
   replies where the addressee sets up an automated agent to
   automatically reply to incoming messages. While this feature sounds
   interesting and useful, the possible misconfiguration and abuse far
   surpasses its usefulness.






































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3. Problems

3.1 Mailing Lists

   Many employees in technical positions subscribe to mailing lists,
   most to several simultaneously. If every message from the mailing
   list generates an automated OoO reply, the list contributors will be
   annoyed or, even worse, the list will be swamped with OoO messages,
   thus effectively posing a denial-of-service attack. This especially
   counts for large lists hosted on systems with limited bandwidth.

   In addition, OoO replies will possibly generate traffic about the
   reply from annoyed subscribers, thus lowering the signal/noise ratio
   significantly.

3.2 Security Considerations

   OoO replies are known to contain job information about the addressee.
   This is particularly interesting if the job is in a sensitive area
   like Human Resources, account management or some sort of security
   position. Any such information may help a hostile person
   significantly to launch a social engineering attack against the
   organization.

   "Social Engineering" is the process of gleaning potentially sensitive
   information from third parties or making them initiate processes that
   are  available only to personnel inside the organization being
   attacked.























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4. Suggested Practices

   Wherever possible, OoO replies SHOULD NOT be used. If they have to be
   used, their use should be tightly controlled:

   1.  OoO replies SHOULD only be used internal to any organization.
       Any mailbox available for contact with external parties SHOULD be
       a role-based mailbox to which several employees have access.
       Outgoing replies SHOULD have a From: header from that role
       mailbox, not from the person replying. This serves the purposes
       of

       *  being always available to the external party

       *  keeping sensitive information in-house.

       Role-based mailboxes SHALL NOT generate OoO replies ever.

   2.  OoO replies MUST NOT include job information of the addressee.

   3.  OoO replies SHALL NOT be generated in response to emails with a
       Header "Precedence: bulk", "Precedence: junk" or "Precedence:
       list".

   4.  OoO systems MUST remember which originators were already notified
       and MUST NOT resend another OoO reply during a configurable
       timeframe. This timeframe SHOULD vary between one week and one
       month.

   5.  An OoO reply MUST NOT be generated in response to emails

       1.  from an address that ends with -REQUEST

       2.  originating from Postmaster

       3.  originating from UUCP,

       4.  originating from MAILER,

       5.  originating from MAILER-DAEMON.

       These addresses have a high probability of being used by
       automated services of the given mail system and thus might be
       able to create a mail loop. This has to be avoided by all means.

   6.  An OoO reply MUST NOT be generated in response to messages that
       are tagged as spam. OoO replies are a great way for spammers to
       harvest addresses for further mailings.



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   7.  The Postmaster role either MUST be able to turn off the OoO reply
       feature for every user on the system or MUST be able to delegate
       this task to an appropriate party (like a system administrator).
















































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References

   [1]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
        Levels", March 1997.


Author's Address

   Axel Eble
   Frankfurt Security Consulting Kooperative
   Aussiger Str. 7
   Rodgau  63110
   DE

   Phone: +49 178 285-3265
   EMail: axel.eble@fsck.de



































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   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
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Acknowledgment

   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
   Internet Society.











































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