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Razer Synapse 3.7.0731.072516 Local Privilege Escalation

Razer Synapse version 3.7.0731.072516 suffers from a local privilege escalation due to a DLL hijacking vulnerability.

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#vulnerability#web#mac#windows#microsoft#auth

Advisory ID: SYSS-2022-047
Product: Razer Synapse
Manufacturer: Razer Inc.
Affected Version(s): Versions before 3.7.0830.081906
Tested Version(s): 3.7.0731.072516
Vulnerability Type: Improper Certificate Validation (CWE-295)
Risk Level: High
Solution Status: Open
Manufacturer Notification: 2022-08-02
Solution Date: 2022-09-06
Public Disclosure: 2022-12-21
CVE Reference: CVE-2022-47632
Author of Advisory: Dr. Oliver Schwarz, SySS GmbH


Overview:

Razer Synapse is an additional driver software for Razer gaming devices.  
The manufacturer describes the product as a "unified cloud-based hardware  
configuration tool" (see [1]).

Due to an unsafe installation path, improper privilege management, and  
improper certificate validation, the associated system service  
"Razer Synapse Service" is vulnerable to DLL hijacking.  
As a result, local Windows users can abuse the Razer driver installer  
to obtain administrative privileges on Windows.

In order to exploit the vulnerability, the attacker needs physical  
access to the machine and needs to prepare the attack before Razer  
Synapse is installed along with a Razer driver.

Vulnerability Details:

The attack scenario considers a Windows machine without any previous
installation of any Razer device or software.
The attacker has a local unprivileged Windows account, physical access
to the machine, and a device which is either a Razer peripheral or able
to pretend to be one (such as a Bash Bunny or a Raspberry Pi Zero).
The attacker aims at executing code with full system privileges.

The attack exploits the Razer Synapse Service which runs with elevated
privileges. While the main binary of the service is stored in the
protected location "C:\Program Files (x86)\Razer\Synapse3\Service", it
dynamically loads libraries from
"C:\ProgramData\Razer\Synapse3\Service\bin".
Before the installation, standard users can write to this path, since
“C:\ProgramData” is world-writable on a standard installation of Windows.

The Synapse installation procedure changes access privileges, so that
standard users cannot write to the path any longer.
However, if the path is created before the driver installation, the
creator can set own files to be read-only and deny write access for
the SYSTEM user.

Upon start, the Synapse service checks the location for foreign DLLs,
removes them and aborts upon failure to delete them.
Nevertheless, the DLL check is simply based on verifying if the DLL is
associated with ANY certificate information. The service does not
verify if the certificate is actually valid or belongs to Razer.

Note that the described vulnerability is similar to CVE-2021-44226,
which has been fixed in Synapse version 3.7.0228.022817.
The new attack differs from the original one in that the attacker
now has to employ self-signed DLLs instead of non-signed ones.


Proof of Concept (PoC):

The attack consists of the following steps:

1. Before the installation of the driver/Synapse, the attacker creates  
    "C:\ProgramData\Razer\Synapse3\Service", copies a custom/malicious  
    and self-signed version of userenv.dll into the directory, sets the  
    DLL to read-only, and denies write access for SYSTEM.

2. Afterwards, the attacker triggers the installation of Synapse.  
    This can be done without any elevated privileges by plugging in a  
    Razer device and following the installation procedure for Synapse  
    if device-specific co-installers are not disabled.  
    Alternatively, a device such as Bash Bunny or a Raspberry Pi Zero  
    can be used and pretend to be a Razer device.

Solution:

Razer has published a patched version that will be deployed automatically
upon driver installation on current Windows builds.

To prevent similar attacks through other co-installers, system
administrators can disable them by setting the following key in the
Windows registry:

HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Device
Installer\DisableCoInstallers = 1


Disclosure Timeline:

2022-06-02: Vulnerability discovered  
2022-08-02: Vulnerability reported to manufacturer  
2022-09-06: Patch released by manufacturer  
2022-12-21: Public disclosure of vulnerability

References:

[1] Product website for Razer Synapse 3
https://www2.razer.com/eu-en/synapse-3
[2] SySS Security Advisory SYSS-2022-047

https://www.syss.de/fileadmin/dokumente/Publikationen/Advisories/SYSS-2022-047.txt
[3] SySS Responsible Disclosure Policy
https://www.syss.de/en/responsible-disclosure-policy


Credits:

This security vulnerability was found by Dr. Oliver Schwarz of SySS GmbH.

E-Mail: [email protected]  
Public Key:   
https://www.syss.de/fileadmin/dokumente/PGPKeys/Oliver_Schwarz.asc  
Key ID: 0x9716294F1294280D  
Key Fingerprint: D452 B014 E992 2886 E799 6B43 9716 294F 1294 280D

Disclaimer:

The information provided in this security advisory is provided “as is”
and without warranty of any kind. Details of this security advisory may
be updated in order to provide as accurate information as possible. The
latest version of this security advisory is available on the SySS website.


Copyright:

Creative Commons - Attribution (by) - Version 3.0  
URL: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en

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Razer Synapse through 3.7.1209.121307 allows privilege escalation due to an unsafe installation path and improper privilege management. Attackers can place DLLs into %PROGRAMDATA%\Razer\Synapse3\Service\bin if they do so before the service is installed and if they deny write access for the SYSTEM user. Although the service will not start if it detects malicious DLLs in this directory, attackers can exploit a race condition and replace a valid DLL (i.e., a copy of a legitimate Razer DLL) with a malicious DLL after the service has already checked the file. As a result, local Windows users can abuse the Razer driver installer to obtain administrative privileges on Windows.

CVE-2022-47632: SySS GmbH - The Pentest Experts

Razer Synapse before 3.7.0830.081906 allows privilege escalation due to an unsafe installation path, improper privilege management, and improper certificate validation. Attackers can place malicious DLLs into %PROGRAMDATA%\Razer\Synapse3\Service\bin if they do so before the service is installed and if they deny write access for the SYSTEM user. Although the service will not start if the malicious DLLs are unsigned, it suffices to use self-signed DLLs. The validity of the DLL signatures is not checked. As a result, local Windows users can abuse the Razer driver installer to obtain administrative privileges on Windows.

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Razer Synapse before 3.7.0228.022817 allows privilege escalation because it relies on %PROGRAMDATA%\Razer\Synapse3\Service\bin even if %PROGRAMDATA%\Razer has been created by any unprivileged user before Synapse is installed. The unprivileged user may have placed Trojan horse DLLs there.

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