Internet DRAFT - draft-west-cookie-incrementalism
draft-west-cookie-incrementalism
Network Working Group M. West
Internet-Draft Google
Intended status: Standards Track March 15, 2020
Expires: September 16, 2020
Incrementally Better Cookies
draft-west-cookie-incrementalism-01
Abstract
This document proposes a few changes to cookies inspired by the
properties of the HTTP State Tokens mechanism proposed in
[I-D.west-http-state-tokens]. First, cookies should be treated as
"SameSite=Lax" by default. Second, cookies that explicitly assert
"SameSite=None" in order to enable cross-site delivery should also be
marked as "Secure". Third, same-site should take the scheme of the
sites into account. Fourth, cookies should respect schemes. Fifth,
cookies associated with non-secure schemes should be removed at the
end of a user's session. Sixth, the definition of a session should
be tightened.
Status of This Memo
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Conventions and Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1. Conformance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.2. Syntax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Monkey-Patches against RFC6265bis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3.1. "Lax" by Default . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3.1.1. "Lax-Allowing-Unsafe" Enforcement . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.2. Requiring "Secure" for "SameSite=None" . . . . . . . . . 8
3.3. Schemeful Same-Site . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.4. Scheming Cookies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.5. Evict Non-Secure Cookies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.6. Session Lifetime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4. Security and Privacy Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.1. CSRF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.2. Secure Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.3. Tracking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5. Implementation Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.1. Sequencing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.2. Deployment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
7. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
7.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
7.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
1. Introduction
The HTTP State Tokens proposal ([I-D.west-http-state-tokens]) aims to
replace cookies with a state management mechanism that has better
security and privacy properties. That proposal is somewhat
aspirational: it's going to take a long time to come to agreement on
the exact contours of a cookie replacement, and an even longer time
to actually do so.
While we're debating the details of a new state management primitive,
it seems quite reasonable to reevaluate some aspects of the existing
primitive: cookies. When we can find consensus on some aspect of
HTTP State Tokens, we can apply those aspirations to cookies, driving
incremental improvements to state management in the status quo.
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Based on conversations at [HTTP-Workshop-2019] and elsewhere, I'd
suggest that we have something like agreement on at least three
principles:
1. HTTP requests should not carry state along with cross-site
requests by default (see Section 8.2 of [RFC6265bis]).
2. HTTP requests should not carry state over non-secure channels
(see Section 8.3 of [RFC6265bis], and [RFC7258]).
3. Non-secure channels should not be able to infuence the state of
securely-transported content (see Sections 8.3, 8.5, and 8.6 of
[RFC6265bis]).
With those principles in mind, this document proposes a few changes
that seem possible to deploy in the near-term. User agents should:
1. Treat the lack of an explicit "SameSite" attribute as
"SameSite=Lax". That is, the "Set-Cookie" value "key=value" will
produce a cookie equivalent to "key=value; SameSite=Lax".
Cookies that require cross-site delivery can explicitly opt-into
such behavior by asserting "SameSite=None" when creating a
cookie.
This is spelled out in more detail in Section 3.1.
2. Require the "Secure" attribute to be set for any cookie which
asserts "SameSite=None" (similar conceptually to the behavior for
the "__Secure-" prefix). That is, the "Set-Cookie" value
"key=value; SameSite=None; Secure" will be accepted, while
"key=value; SameSite=None" will be rejected.
This is spelled out in more detail in Section 3.2.
3. Require both the scheme and registrable domain of a request's
client's "site for cookies" to match the target URL when deciding
whether a given request is considered same-site. That is, a
request initiated from "http://site.example" to
"https://site.example" should be considered cross-site.
This is spelled out in more detail in Section 3.3.
4. Separate cookies by scheme. That is, a given cookie set from
"http://example.com/" should be considered distinct from the same
cookie set from "https://example.com/", preventing the former
from influencing the state of the latter.
This is spelled out in more detail in Section 3.4.
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5. Evict non-secure cookies when a user's session on a non-secure
site ends, thereby reducing the timespan over which a user
broadcasts a stable identifier to the network.
This is spelled out in more detail in Section 3.5.
6. Tighten the definition of a user's "session" with heuristics that
better represent users' expectations.
This is spelled out in more detail in Section 3.6.
2. Conventions and Definitions
2.1. Conformance
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
capitals, as shown here.
2.2. Syntax
This document adjusts some syntax from [RFC6265bis], and in doing so,
relies upon the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) notation of
[RFC5234].
3. Monkey-Patches against RFC6265bis
3.1. "Lax" by Default
The processing algorithm in Section 5.3.7 of [RFC6265bis] treats the
absence of a "SameSite" attribute in a "Set-Cookie" header as
equivalent to the presence of "SameSite=None". Cookies are therefore
available for cross-site delivery by default, and developers may opt-
into more security by setting some other value explicitly. Ideally,
we'd invert that such that developers who accepted the risks of
cross-site delivery (see Section 8.2 of [RFC6265bis]) could opt into
them, while developers who didn't make any explicit choice would be
protected by default.
We could accomplish this goal by first altering the processing
algorithm, replacing the current step 1:
1. Let "enforcement" be "None".
with the following two steps:
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1. Let "enforcement" be "Default".
2. If cookie-av's attribute-value is a case-insensitive
match for "None", set "enforcement" to "None".
And then by, altering step 13 of the cookie storage model
(Section 5.4 of [RFC6265bis]) from:
13. If the cookie-attribute-list contains an attribute
with an attribute-name of "SameSite", set the cookie's
same-site-flag to attribute-value (i.e. either "Strict",
"Lax", or "None"). Otherwise, set the cookie's
same-site-flag to "None".
to:
13. If the cookie-attribute-list contains an attribute
with an attribute-name of "SameSite" and an
attribute-value of "Strict", "Lax", or "None", set the
cookie's same-site-flag to attribute-value. Otherwise,
set the cookie's same-site-flag to "Default".
And finally by altering the fifth bullet point of step 1 of the
cookie-string construction algorithm in Section 5.5 of [RFC6265bis]
from:
* If the cookie's same-site-flag is not "None", and the HTTP
request is cross-site (as defined in Section 5.2) then exclude
the cookie unless all of the following statements hold:
1. The same-site-flag is "Lax"
2. The HTTP request's method is "safe".
3. The HTTP request's target browsing context is a top-level
browsing context.
to:
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* If the cookie's same-site-flag is not "None", and the HTTP
request is cross-site (as defined in Section 5.2) then exclude
the cookie unless all of the following statements hold:
1. The same-site-flag is "Lax" or "Default".
2. The HTTP request's method is "safe".
3. The HTTP request's target browsing context is a top-level
browsing context.
This would have the effect of mapping the default behavior in the
absence of an explicit "SameSite" attribute, as well as the presence
of any unknown "SameSite" value, to the "Lax" behavior, protecting
developers by making cross-site delivery an explicit choice, as
opposed to an implicit default.
3.1.1. "Lax-Allowing-Unsafe" Enforcement
The "Lax" enforcement mode described in Section 5.3.7.1 of
[RFC6265bis] allows a cookie to be sent along with cross-site
requests if and only if they are top-level navigations with a "safe"
HTTP method. Implementation experience shows that this is difficult
to apply across the board, and it may be reasonable to temporarily
carve out cases in which some cookies that rely on today's default
behavior can continue to be delivered as the default is shifted to
"Lax" enforcement.
One such carveout, described in this section, accommodates certain
cases in which it may be desirable for a cookie to be excluded from
non-top-level cross-site requests, but to be sent with all top-level
navigations regardless of HTTP request method.
For example, a login flow may involve a cross-site top-level POST
request to an endpoint which expects a cookie with login information.
For such a cookie, "Lax" enforcement is not appropriate, as it would
cause the cookie to be excluded due to the unsafe HTTP request
method. On the other hand, "None" enforcement would allow the cookie
to be sent with all cross-site requests. For a cookie containing
potentially sensitive login information, this may not be desirable.
In order to retain some of the protections of "Lax" enforcement (as
compared to "None") while still allowing cookies to be sent cross-
site with unsafe top-level requests, user agents may choose to
provide an intermediate "Lax-allowing-unsafe" enforcement mode. A
cookie whose enforcement mode is "Lax-allowing-unsafe" will be sent
along with a cross-site request if and only if it is a top-level
request, regardless of request method.
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User agents may choose to apply this enforcement mode instead of
"Lax" enforcement, but only in a limited or restricted fashion. Such
restrictions may include applying "Lax-allowing-unsafe" only to
cookies that did not explicitly specify "SameSite=Lax" (i.e., those
whose same-site-flag was set to "Default" by default) with creation-
time more recent than a duration of the user agent's choosing (2
minutes seems reasonable).
This is done by further modifying the previously mentioned fifth
bullet point of step 1 of the cookie-string construction algorithm in
Section 5.5 of [RFC6265bis] from:
* If the cookie's same-site-flag is not "None", and the HTTP
request is cross-site (as defined in Section 5.2) then exclude
the cookie unless all of the following statements hold:
1. The same-site-flag is "Lax" or "Default".
2. The HTTP request's method is "safe".
3. The HTTP request's target browsing context is a top-level
browsing context.
to:
* If the cookie's same-site-flag is not "None", and the HTTP
request is cross-site (as defined in Section 5.2) then exclude
the cookie unless all of the following statements hold:
1. The same-site-flag is "Lax" or "Default".
2. The HTTP request's method is "safe", or the cookie meets
the user agent's requirements for being granted
"Lax-allowing-unsafe" enforcement.
3. The HTTP request's target browsing context is a top-level
browsing context.
As a more permissive variant of "Lax" mode, "Lax-allowing-unsafe"
mode necessarily provides fewer protections against CSRF.
Ultimately, the provision of such an enforcement mode should be seen
as a temporary measure to ease adoption of "Lax" enforcement by
default.
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3.2. Requiring "Secure" for "SameSite=None"
Cookies sent over plaintext HTTP are visible to anyone on the
network. As section 8.3 of [RFC6265bis] points out, this visibility
exposes substantial amounts of data to network attackers. We know,
for example, that long-lived and stable cookies have enabled
pervasive monitoring [RFC7258] in the past (see Google's PREF cookie
[pref-cookie]), and we know that a secure transport layer provides
significant confidentiality protections against this kind of attack.
We can, to a reasonable extent, mitigate this threat by ensuring that
cookies intended for cross-site delivery (and therefore likely to be
more prevalent on the wire than cookies scoped down to same-site
requests) require secure transport.
That is, we can require that any cookie which asserts "SameSite=None"
must also assert the "Secure" attribute (Section 4.1.2.5 of
[RFC6265bis]) by altering the storage model defined in Section 5.4 of
[RFC6265bis], inserting the following step after the existing step
14:
15. If the cookie's "same-site-flag" is "None", abort
these steps and ignore the cookie entirely unless
the cookie's secure-only-flag is true.
This is conceptually similar to the requirements put into place for
the "__Secure-" prefix (Section 4.1.3.1 of [RFC6265bis]).
3.3. Schemeful Same-Site
By considering the scheme as well as the registrable domain when
determining whether a given request is "same-site", the "SameSite"
attribute can protect secure origins from CSRF attacks initiated by a
network attacker that can forge requests from a non-secure origin on
the same registrable domain. To do so we need to modify a number of
things:
First change the definition of "site for cookies" from a registrable
domain to an origin. In the places where a we return an empty string
for a non-existent "site for cookies" we should instead return an
origin set to a freshly generated globally unique identifier. Then
replace the same-site calculation algorithm with the following:
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Two origins, A and B, are considered same-site if the following algorithm returns true:
1. If A and B are both scheme/host/port triples then
1. If A's scheme does not equal B's scheme, return false.
2. Let hostA be A's host, and hostB be B's host.
3. If hostA equals hostB and hostA's registrable domain is null, return true.
4. If hostA's registrable domain equals hostB's registrable domain and is non-null, return true.
2. If A and B are both the same globally unique identifier, return true.
3. Return false.
Note: The port component of the origins is not considered.
A request is "same-site" if its target's URI's origin
is same-site with the request's client's "site for cookies", or if the
request has no client. The request is otherwise "cross-site".
Now that we have a new algorithm, we can update any comparision of
two sites from "have the same registrable domain" (or "is an exact
match for") to say "is same-site".
Note: The request's URL when establishing a WebSockets connection has
scheme "http" or "https", rather than "ws" or "wss". FETCH maps
schemes when constructing the request. This mapping allows same-site
cookies to be sent with WebSockets.
3.4. Scheming Cookies
Cookies are one of the very few components of the web platform that
ignore scheme by default. The "Secure" attribute can lock a cookie
to secure schemes, and the "__Secure-" prefix can harden that
boundary, but these mechanisms are little-used, and cookies lacking
these protections flow across scheme boundaries. They are delivered
to both the HTTP and HTTPS variants of a given domain, even though
their security properties differ radically. As Section 8.6 of
[RFC6265bis] points out, this gives network attackers the ability to
influence otherwise secured traffic by modifying user state that
flows to secure origins, and, of course, insight into user behavior
as securely-set cookies that lack the "Secure" attribute likewise
flow from secure origins to non-secure variants.
We should remedy this defect by storing a "scheme" component along
with the cookie, and using that component in cookies' matching
algorithms to ensure that secure and non-secure origins' state is
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clearly distinguishable and separate. This is accomplished as
follows:
First, alter the Storage Model defined in Section 5.4 of [RFC6265bis]
by adding "scheme" to the list of fields the user agent stores about
each cookie, and setting it when creating a cookie by altering step 2
of the same algorithm from:
2. Create a new cookie with name cookie-name, value cookie-value.
Set the creation-time and the last-access-time to the current
date and time.
to:
2. Create a new cookie with name cookie-name, value cookie-value.
Set the creation-time and the last-access-time to the current
date and time. Set the scheme to request-uri's origin's scheme
component.
Likewise alter step 17 of the same algorithm from:
17. If the cookie store contains a cookie with the same name,
domain, host-only-flag, and path as the newly-created cookie:
to:
17. If the cookie store contains a cookie with the same name, scheme,
domain, host-only-flag, and path as the newly-created cookie:
And step 17.1 from:
17.1. Let old-cookie be the existing cookie with the same name,
domain, host-only-flag, and path as the newly-created
cookie. (Notice that this algorithm maintains the invariant
that there is at most one such cookie.)
to:
17.1. Let old-cookie be the existing cookie with the same name, scheme,
domain, host-only-flag, and path as the newly-created
cookie. (Notice that this algorithm maintains the invariant
that there is at most one such cookie.)
Second, alter The Cookie Header algorithm defined in Section 5.5 of
[RFC6265bis] to take the "scheme" into account when deciding which
cookies to deliver by adding another condition to the list in Step 1
of the algorithm:
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* The cookies' `scheme` matches the scheme component of request-uri's origin.
This seems like the minimal set of changes necessary. We could do
other cleanup, including removing the "Secure" attribute, as this
mechanism obviates it entirely, altering the eviction algorithm to
prefer discarding non-secure schemes, etc.
3.5. Evict Non-Secure Cookies
In the status quo, cookies delivered to non-secure origins are,
generally, quite old. Each cookies' age is somewhat representative
of its risk: long-lived cookies expose persistent identifiers to the
network when delivered non-securely which create tracking
opportunities over time. Here, we aim to mitigate this risk by
substantially reducing the lifetime of non-secure cookies, thereby
limiting the window of opportunity for network attackers.
This is similar conceptually to previous proposals, notably
[I-D.thomson-http-omnomnom] and [cookies-over-http-bad], but seems
like it might be more deployable, especially in conjunction with the
scheme changes above.
The change is straightforward, requiring the following text to be
added to the bottom of Section 5.4 of [RFC6265bis]:
~~~ When "the current session is over", the user agent MUST remove
from the cookie store all cookies whose "scheme" component is non-
secure. ~~
As discussed below in {#session-lifetime}, if we add a site-specific
session concept, we can make the following addition:
~~ When "the current session is over" for an origin, the user agent
MUST remove from the cookie store all cookies whose "scheme"
component is non-secure, and whose "domain" component's registrable
domain matches the origin's registrable domain. ~~
This still requires the user agent to define a notion of non-
secureness, but it would certainly include "http".
3.6. Session Lifetime
Section 5.4 of [RFC6265bis] defines "the current session is over" by
choosing not to define it, instead leaving it up to the user agent.
Unfortunately, we have several "session" concepts in user agents
today, and it's not clear that any of them are appropriate for
cookies. HTML's "sessionStorage" lifetime is tied to a particular
top-level browsing context, thereby giving two tabs/windows different
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views into a page's state. Various user agents' "private mode"
create sessions that are scoped in various ways: Chrome's Incognito
mode ties a session's lifetime to the closure of the last Incognito
window, Safari's private mode's lifetime is tab-specific, etc.
Session cookies' lifetime likewise differs between user agents, in
some cases based on user-visible settings like Chrome's "Continue
where you left off" (which can lead to quite persistent sessions
indeed).
At some risk of further complicating the notion of a "session", it
might be reasonable to learn from existing user agents' work around
meeting users' conceptions of when they're using a given site, and to
define a recommended heuristic that user agents could adopt. In
particular, Chromium's site engagement score and Safari's ITP both
track a user's last moment of interaction with a site (which might
feasibly include things like navigation, clicks, scrolls, etc). This
seems like a useful bit of data to take into account, along with
whether or not a user has top-level browsing contexts that include a
given site.
To that end, we could add a few concepts to [RFC6265bis] to give
browser vendors more clarity around a reasonable approach to defining
when "the current session is over" for a specific site, rather that
for the browsing session as a whole. Something along the following
lines makes sense to me:
1. User agents should store a timestamp of the last interaction with
a given site in a top-level browsing context [HTML]. User agents
have a great deal of flexibility in what they consider an
interaction, but typing and clicking should probably count.
2. Change the "close a browsing context" algorithm [HTML] to call
the following algorithm between its existing step 1 and step 2:
1. Let "closedOrigin" be the origin of "browsingContext"'s
active document.
2. For each top-level browsing context "c":
1. If "c" is "browsingContext", continue.
2. If "c"'s active document's origin is same site with
"browsingContext"'s active document's origin, return.
3. ASSERT: No top-level browsing context contains a document
that's same-site with the document being closed.
4. Return, and continue running this algorithm in parallel.
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5. Wait however long a user would reasonably expect their state
to be retained (an hour sounds reasonable).
6. For each top-level browsing context "c":
1. If "c"'s active document's origin is same site with
"closedOrigin", return.
7. ASSERT: No top-level browsing context contains a document
that's same-site with the document that was closed.
8. Trigger "the current session is over" for "closedOrigin".
3. Define a new handler for "the current session is over" that takes
an origin into account, and clears session cookies for that
origin's site.
Note that these definitions refer to "site", not "origin", as cookies
span an entire registrable domain. Ideally, we'll address that too,
but not today.
4. Security and Privacy Considerations
4.1. CSRF
"SameSite" is a reasonably robust defense against some classes of
cross-site request forgery attacks, as described in Section 8.8.1 of
[RFC6265bis], but developers need to opt-into its protections in
order for them to have any effect. That is, developers are
vulnerable to CSRF attacks by default, and must do some work to shift
themselves into a more defensible position.
The change proposed in Section 3.1 would invert that requirement,
placing the burden on the small number of developers who are building
services that require state in cross-site requests. Those developers
would be empowered to opt-into the status quo's less-secure model,
while developers who don't intend for their projects to be embedded
in cross-site contexts are protected by default.
4.2. Secure Transport
As discussed in Section 8.3 of [RFC6265bis], cookies delivered over
plaintext channels are exposed to intermediaries, and thereby enable
pervasive monitoring [RFC7258]. The change proposed in Section 3.2
above would set secure transport as a baseline requirement for all
stateful cross-site requests, thereby reducing the risk that these
cookies can be cataloged or modified by network attackers.
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Requiring secure transport for cookies intended for cross-site usage
has the exciting secondary effect of increasing pressure on entities
that produce embeddable content to migrate their products to HTTPS.
That has security benefits for those third-party products themselves,
but also has the effect of removing the potential of mixed content
([mixed-content]) as a blocker to first-party migration to HTTPS.
Note that in the long term, it seems quite reasonable to take the
additional step of requiring the "Secure" attribute for all cookies,
regardless of their "SameSite" value. That would have more
substantial impact on pervasive monitoring and network attackers
generally. This document's proposal limits itself to "SameSite=None"
because that seems like a low-hanging, high-value change that's
deployable in the near term. User agents are encouraged to find
additional subsets for which "Secure" can be required.
4.3. Tracking
The proposals in this document do not in themselves mitigate the
privacy risks described in Section 7.1 of [RFC6265bis]. Entities who
wish to use cookies to track user activity from cross-site contexts
can continue to do so by setting cookies that declare themselves as
"SameSite=None".
Requiring that explicit declaration, however, gives user agents the
ability to easily distinguish cookies used for stateful cross-site
requests from those with narrower scope. After the change proposed
in Section 3.1, only those cookies that make an explicit
"SameSite=None" declaration can be directly used for cross-site
tracking. It may make sense for user agents to use that information
to give users different controls for these cookies, or to apply
different policies for expiration and delivery.
5. Implementation Considerations
5.1. Sequencing
The steps described in this document don't need to be taken at the
same time. It's quite possible that it will be less disruptive to
deploy "SameSite=Lax" as a default first, then to require the
"Secure" attribute for any explicitly "SameSite=None" cookie as a
subsequent step, and then deploying schemeful same-site in a final
step.
User agents are encouraged to adopt these recommendations in whatever
order they believe will lead to the widest, most expedient
deployment.
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5.2. Deployment
It's possible that a middle-ground between "SameSite=Lax" and
"SameSite=None" could be a better balance between doing what
developers want by default, and mitigating CSRF by default.
[I-D.west-cookie-samesite-firstparty] explores the possibility of
integrating First-Party Sets [first-party-set] with the "SameSite"
attribute in order to allow entities that shard themselves across
multiple registrable domains to maintain stateful communication
between them (to support single-sign on, for example).
It's possible that user agents who support First-Party Sets could
reduce the deployment overhead for developers, and increase the
robustness of a site's CSRF defense for cross-site-but-not-cross-
party cookies by defaulting to something like that document's
"FirstPartyLax" instead of "Lax".
6. IANA Considerations
This document has no IANA actions.
7. References
7.1. Normative References
[HTML] "HTML", n.d., <https://html.spec.whatwg.org/>.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC5234] Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.
[RFC6265bis]
West, M. and J. Wilander, "Cookies: HTTP State Management
Mechanism", draft-ietf-httpbis-rfc6265bis-05 (work in
progress), February 2020.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
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7.2. Informative References
[cookies-over-http-bad]
West, M., "Cookies over HTTP Bad", April 2018,
<https://github.com/mikewest/cookies-over-http-bad>.
[first-party-set]
West, M., "First-Party Sets", n.d.,
<https://mikewest.github.io/first-party-sets/>.
[HTTP-Workshop-2019]
Nottingham, M., "HTTP Workshop 2019: Report", April 2019,
<https://github.com/HTTPWorkshop/workshop2019/wiki/
Report>.
[I-D.thomson-http-omnomnom]
Thomson, M. and C. Peterson, "Expiring Aggressively Those
HTTP Cookies", draft-thomson-http-omnomnom-00 (work in
progress), May 2016.
[I-D.west-cookie-samesite-firstparty]
West, M., "First-Party Sets and SameSite Cookies", draft-
west-cookie-samesite-firstparty-01 (work in progress), May
2019.
[I-D.west-http-state-tokens]
West, M., "HTTP State Tokens", draft-west-http-state-
tokens-00 (work in progress), March 2019.
[mixed-content]
West, M., "Mixed Content", n.d.,
<https://w3c.github.io/webappsec-mixed-content/>.
[pref-cookie]
Soltani, A., Peterson, A., and B. Gellman, "NSA uses
Google cookies to pinpoint targets for hacking", December
2013, <https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-
switch/wp/2013/12/10/
nsa-uses-google-cookies-to-pinpoint-targets-for-hacking/>.
[RFC7258] Farrell, S. and H. Tschofenig, "Pervasive Monitoring Is an
Attack", BCP 188, RFC 7258, DOI 10.17487/RFC7258, May
2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7258>.
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Acknowledgments
Conversations with a number of folks at 2019's HTTP Workshop helped
me clarify my thinking around the incremental improvements we can
make to cookies. In particular, Martin Thomson and Anne van Kesteren
provided insightful feedback.
Lily Chen has been instrumental in initial deployments of the
"SameSite" changes described in Section 3.1 and Section 3.2, proving
that incremental changes to cookies can be successfully shipped.
Steven Bingler contributed the "Schemeful SameSite" proposal
described in Section 3.3.
Author's Address
Mike West
Google
Email: mkwst@google.com
URI: https://www.mikewest.org/
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