•  henfredemars   ( @henfredemars@infosec.pub ) 
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    10 months ago

    My work runs MITM with corporate certificates, so they can see everything no matter whether it’s encrypted or not. If you don’t accept the certificates to let them monitor, you can’t browse.

    Therefore, I just don’t use it.

      •  Darkassassin07   ( @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca ) 
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        10 months ago

        Corporate networks (especially those utilizing MITM) block vpn access altogether.

        You can’t reach your vpn server, falling back to plain un-tunneled https. Then instead of dns retuning the true ip, it returns a local corporate ip; you connect to that with https and it serves you a cert generated on the fly for that particular domain signed by a root cert your browser already trusts. Your browser sees nothing wrong and transmits via that compromised connection.

        You can usually check for this by connecting via mobile data, taking a screenshot of the cert details, then doing the same on work wifi and compare.

        If the cert details change on wifi, your traffic is being intercepted, decrypted, read/logged, then re-encrypted and passed to the server you’re trying to reach.

        • I was talking about work VPN, the thing I connect to every morning to access work’s internal services.

          I don’t see how a 3rd party device connecting to wifi can have https MITM. Otherwise many wifi out there would do it and steal your info.