Certificates, Education Center
How To Handle Breached Certificate and Key

Certificates, Education Center
In the world of cybersecurity, the protection of sensitive data and secure communication is paramount. SSL/TLS certificates and cryptographic keys are crucial in ensuring secure connections and safeguarding information during transmission. However, even with robust security measures, breaches can occur, and when they involve compromised certificates or keys, the consequences can be severe. We will explore the best practices for handling a breached certificate and the key to mitigate risks, maintain cyber resilience, and protect the integrity of your digital infrastructure.
A breached certificate is an SSL/TLS certificate that has fallen into unauthorized hands due to malicious activities or security vulnerabilities. On the other hand, a breached key implies that the private key associated with the certificate has been compromised, potentially allowing attackers to intercept encrypted data or impersonate the legitimate certificate holder. Such breaches can occur for various reasons, including phishing attacks, insider threats, or weaknesses in the certificate management process.
Detection and Isolation
Incident Response Plan
Revoking and Reissuing Certificates
Key Rotation
Perform Forensic Analysis
Patch Vulnerabilities
Enhance Authentication and Access Controls
Educate and Train Employees
Once an attack is identified and confirmed, it is only half way done. Next, the challenge is how to remove the access of an adversary on the enterprises’ critical digital assets, such as keys and certificates as most organizations fail to understand the real impact of a certificate or key breach.
We can dig into the past and find that there were breach incidents like stolen digital certificates where an organization was unable to understand the consequences due to not replacing the digital certificates immediately. Ideally, organizations should be able to react quickly and respond to all systems impacted by breach to have their operations running in a secure manner.
While remediating a breach, the first step is to identify the inventory of the systems impacted in the environment. For example, if any breach related to SSL is discovered, then the next steps are to find out the comprehensive usage of SSL while connecting to URLs, Web Servers, Share Point portals etc. With this, the penetration depth of the breach can be ascertained up to a great extent. The usage of any SSL/TLS certificate or key compromise can be taken into account to determine the overall impact on the environment.
Once the attack is confirmed, the pre-defined approach should kick-off, where the responsibilities are pre-decided as to who will do what. At the same time, when the security team is taking actions to contain and remediate the attack, attackers try to plant some rogue certificates and keys that can help them access the resources in the future. In that case, the security team should revalidate the inventory of the certificates/keys through the certificate and key lifecycle management tools and discard/deactivate the rogue digital assets.
Once the remediation action has been completed for the attack, and the rogue certificates and keys have been replaced successfully, it becomes important to revalidate the remediation report and confirm if the remediation steps were completed successfully or not. This might cause serious consequences in case an adversary’s footprint is still left in the environment. Organizations can match the breach report and remediation report to determine the accuracy of the remediation attempt and to make themselves confident about its present security strength.
Handling a breached certificate and key is a critical test of an organization’s cyber resilience and response capabilities. Organizations can minimize the impact of security incidents by promptly detecting breaches, revoking compromised certificates, and reissuing new certificates. Implementing strong security measures, conducting forensic analysis, and enhancing access controls are essential to protect sensitive data and maintain cyber resilience. With a comprehensive incident response plan and ongoing employee training, organizations can fortify their defenses and mitigate the risks of breached certificates and keys in the ever-evolving cybersecurity landscape.
Encryption Consulting provides a specialized Certificate Lifecycle management solution CertSecure Manager. From discovery and inventory to issuance, deployment, renewal, revocation, and reporting. CertSecure provides an all-encompassing solution. Intelligent report generation, alerting, automation, automatic deployment onto servers, and certificate enrollment add layers of sophistication, making it a versatile and intelligent asset.
February 14, 2025
January 24, 2025