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@lightclient
"One bad signature will be able to drain your account on Ethereum after EIP-3074." Yes; this is true. 3074 coauthor here! Let me put this concern to rest a bit before it gets more out of hand.
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@lightclient
To start: I'm not aware of any wallets that support signing unprefixed data today. This means that currently, no wallets support 3074. Doesn't matter how many control panels you navigate through or advanced features you turn on. It isn't possible to sign a 3074 message today.
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@lightclient
The messages you sign to "login" to dapps use a completely different standard based on EIP-191. This prepends the following data to the message you sign: """ 0x19 <0x45 (E)> <thereum Signed Message:\n" + len(message)> <data to sign> """
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@lightclient
That's what makes it impossible to trick someone logging into a dapp to actually sign a valid Ethereum transaction. Transactions are prefixed with single byte values: 0x01 - 2930 tx 0x02 - 1559 tx 0x03 - 4844 tx more info here: https://github.com/ethereum/execution-specs/tree/master/lists/signature-types
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@lightclient
3074 plans to use the prefix 0x04. This will disambiguate it from all other types of signable data in Ethereum. Wallets will have to actively opt-in to allowing users to sign these messages.
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@lightclient
Depending on how wallets integrate 3074, they could create a situation where their users can more easily be exploited. To understand this, we need to make sure we understand how 3074 signatures work.
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@lightclient
The auth msg which the signature is constructed over have the below fields. Importantly, it includes an invoker address. This is the only address under which the signature will be considered valid by AUTH.
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@lightclient
For an account to be drained 1) the wallet will need to allow users to sign to any invoker address and 2) the users must not verify the invoker is trustworthy. Do either of those and there is not an issue.
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@lightclient
For 1) we hope wallets understand that 3074 invokers are more akin to extensions of their code than they are contracts. Wallets don't give users the freedom to run arbitrary code with access to their pk; similarly, they shouldn't allow users to delegate their account arbitrarily.
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@lightclient
So if wallets insecurely integrate 3074 *and* users do not verify the invoker they're interacting with, it is possible to delegate to a malicious invoker. However, it is possible to undo by sending a single tx from the EOA. This revokes all "in-flight" AUTH signatures.
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Faier
@faier
Can an invoker block a transaction from hitting the mempool? If so, couldn’t it block any attempts at revoking?
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