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Random Cookie Filenames

Digital Forensics, Forensic Analysis, Forensic Investigations, Web Browser Forensics
Cookies next to a laptop keyboard

Internet Explorer Data

As forensic examiners will be aware, Microsoft Internet Explorer stores cached data within randomly assigned folders. This behaviour was designed to prevent Internet data being stored in predictable locations on the local system in order to foil a number of attack types. Prior to the release of Internet Explorer v9.0.2, cookies were an exception to this behaviour and their location was insufficiently random in many cases.

Cookie Files

Generally, for Vista and Windows 7, cookie files are stored in the location shown below:

\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Cookies

The cookie filename format was the user’s login name, the @ symbol and then a partial hostname for the domain of the cookie.

Cookie Files with Standard Name

With sufficient information about a user’s environment, an attacker might have been able to establish the location of any given cookie and use this information in an attack.

Random Cookie Filenames

To mitigate the threat, Internet Explorer 9.0.2 now names the cookie files using a randomly-generated alphanumeric string. Older cookies are not renamed during the upgrade, but are instead renamed as soon as any update to the cookie data occurs. The image below shows an updated cookie folder containing the new files.

Random Cookie Names

This change will have no impact on dealing with the examination of cookie data; however. it will no longer be possible to identify which domain a cookie belongs to from just the file name.

NetAnalysis showing Random Cookie Names

NetAnalysis showing Random Cookie Names

14th September 2011/by Craig Wilson
Tags: Cookies, Internet Explorer
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