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FINDINGS-issue-801.md
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FINDINGS-issue-801.md
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# Security Audit: NostrIdentity BIP340 Schnorr Signatures — Timing Side-Channel Analysis
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**Issue:** #801
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**Repository:** Timmy_Foundation/the-nexus
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**File:** `nexus/nostr_identity.py`
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**Auditor:** mimo-v2-pro swarm worker
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**Date:** 2026-04-10
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---
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## Summary
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The pure-Python BIP340 Schnorr signature implementation in `NostrIdentity` has **multiple timing side-channel vulnerabilities** that could allow an attacker with precise timing measurements to recover the private key. The implementation is suitable for prototyping and non-adversarial environments but **must not be used in production** without the fixes described below.
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---
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## Architecture
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The Nostr sovereign identity system consists of two files:
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- **`nexus/nostr_identity.py`** — Pure-Python secp256k1 + BIP340 Schnorr signature implementation. No external dependencies. Contains `NostrIdentity` class for key generation, event signing, and pubkey derivation.
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- **`nexus/nostr_publisher.py`** — Async WebSocket publisher that sends signed Nostr events to public relays (damus.io, nos.lol, snort.social).
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- **`app.js` (line 507)** — Browser-side `NostrAgent` class uses **mock signatures** (`mock_id`, `mock_sig`), not real crypto. Not affected.
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---
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## Vulnerabilities Found
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### 1. Branch-Dependent Scalar Multiplication — CRITICAL
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**Location:** `nostr_identity.py:41-47` — `point_mul()`
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```python
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def point_mul(p, n):
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r = None
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for i in range(256):
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if (n >> i) & 1: # <-- branch leaks Hamming weight
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r = point_add(r, p)
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p = point_add(p, p)
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return r
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```
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**Problem:** The `if (n >> i) & 1` branch causes `point_add(r, p)` to execute only when the bit is 1. An attacker measuring signature generation time can determine which bits of the scalar are set, recovering the private key from a small number of timed signatures.
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**Severity:** CRITICAL — direct private key recovery.
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**Fix:** Use a constant-time double-and-always-add algorithm:
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```python
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def point_mul(p, n):
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r = (None, None)
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for i in range(256):
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bit = (n >> i) & 1
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r0 = point_add(r, p) # always compute both
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r = r0 if bit else r # constant-time select
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p = point_add(p, p)
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return r
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```
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Or better: use Montgomery ladder which avoids point doubling on the identity.
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---
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### 2. Branch-Dependent Point Addition — CRITICAL
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**Location:** `nostr_identity.py:28-39` — `point_add()`
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```python
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def point_add(p1, p2):
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if p1 is None: return p2 # <-- branch leaks operand state
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if p2 is None: return p1 # <-- branch leaks operand state
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(x1, y1), (x2, y2) = p1, p2
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if x1 == x2 and y1 != y2: return None # <-- branch leaks equality
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if x1 == x2: # <-- branch leaks equality
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m = (3 * x1 * x1 * inverse(2 * y1, P)) % P
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else:
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m = ((y2 - y1) * inverse(x2 - x1, P)) % P
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...
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```
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**Problem:** Multiple conditional branches leak whether inputs are the identity point, whether x-coordinates are equal, and whether y-coordinates are negations. Combined with the scalar multiplication above, this gives an attacker detailed timing information about intermediate computations.
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**Severity:** CRITICAL — compounds the scalar multiplication leak.
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**Fix:** Replace with a branchless point addition using Jacobian or projective coordinates with dummy operations:
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```python
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def point_add(p1, p2):
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# Use Jacobian coordinates; always perform full addition
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# Use conditional moves (simulated with arithmetic masking)
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# for selecting between doubling and addition paths
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```
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---
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### 3. Branch-Dependent Y-Parity Check in Signing — HIGH
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**Location:** `nostr_identity.py:57-58` — `sign_schnorr()`
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```python
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R = point_mul(G, k)
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if R[1] % 2 != 0: # <-- branch leaks parity of R's y-coordinate
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k = N - k
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```
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**Problem:** The conditional negation of `k` based on the y-parity of R leaks information about the nonce through timing. While less critical than the point_mul leak (it's a single bit), combined with other leaks it aids key recovery.
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**Severity:** HIGH
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**Fix:** Use arithmetic masking:
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```python
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R = point_mul(G, k)
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parity = R[1] & 1
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k = (k * (1 - parity) + (N - k) * parity) % N # constant-time select
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```
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---
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### 4. Non-Constant-Time Modular Inverse — MEDIUM
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**Location:** `nostr_identity.py:25-26` — `inverse()`
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```python
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def inverse(a, n):
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return pow(a, n - 2, n)
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```
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**Problem:** CPython's built-in `pow()` with 3 args uses Montgomery ladder internally, which is *generally* constant-time for fixed-size operands. However:
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- This is an implementation detail, not a guarantee.
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- PyPy, GraalPy, and other Python runtimes may use different algorithms.
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- The exponent `n-2` has a fixed Hamming weight for secp256k1's `N`, so this specific case is less exploitable, but relying on it is fragile.
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**Severity:** MEDIUM — implementation-dependent; low risk on CPython specifically.
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**Fix:** Implement Fermat's little theorem inversion with blinding, or use a dedicated constant-time GCD algorithm (extended binary GCD).
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---
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### 5. Non-RFC6979 Nonce Generation — LOW (but non-standard)
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**Location:** `nostr_identity.py:55`
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```python
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k = int.from_bytes(sha256(privkey.to_bytes(32, 'big') + msg_hash), 'big') % N
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```
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**Problem:** The nonce derivation is `SHA256(privkey || msg_hash)` which is deterministic but doesn't follow RFC6979 (HMAC-based DRBG). Issues:
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- Not vulnerable to timing (it's a single hash), but could be vulnerable to related-message attacks if the same key signs messages with predictable relationships.
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- BIP340 specifies `tagged_hash("BIP0340/nonce", ...)` with specific domain separation, which is not used here.
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**Severity:** LOW — not a timing issue but a cryptographic correctness concern.
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**Fix:** Follow RFC6979 or BIP340's tagged hash approach:
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```python
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def sign_schnorr(msg_hash, privkey):
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# BIP340 nonce generation with tagged hash
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t = privkey.to_bytes(32, 'big')
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if R_y_is_odd:
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t = bytes(b ^ 0x01 for b in t) # negate if needed
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k = int.from_bytes(tagged_hash("BIP0340/nonce", t + pubkey + msg_hash), 'big') % N
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```
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---
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### 6. Private Key Bias in Random Generation — LOW
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**Location:** `nostr_identity.py:69`
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```python
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self.privkey = int.from_bytes(os.urandom(32), 'big') % N
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```
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**Problem:** `os.urandom(32)` produces values in `[0, 2^256)`, while `N` is slightly less than `2^256`. The modulo reduction introduces a negligible bias (~2^-128). Not exploitable in practice, but not the cleanest approach.
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**Severity:** LOW — theoretically biased, practically unexploitable.
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**Fix:** Use rejection sampling or derive from a hash:
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```python
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def generate_privkey():
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while True:
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candidate = int.from_bytes(os.urandom(32), 'big')
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if 0 < candidate < N:
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return candidate
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```
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---
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### 7. No Scalar/Point Blinding — MEDIUM
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**Location:** Global — no blinding anywhere in the implementation.
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**Problem:** The implementation has no countermeasures against:
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- **Power analysis** (DPA/SPA) on embedded systems
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- **Cache-timing attacks** on shared hardware (VMs, cloud)
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- **Electromagnetic emanation** attacks
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Adding random blinding to scalar multiplication (multiply by `r * r^-1` where `r` is random) would significantly raise the bar for side-channel attacks beyond simple timing.
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**Severity:** MEDIUM — not timing-specific, but important for hardening.
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---
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## What's NOT Vulnerable (Good News)
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1. **The JS-side `NostrAgent` in `app.js`** uses mock signatures (`mock_id`, `mock_sig`) — not real crypto, not affected.
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2. **`nostr_publisher.py`** correctly imports and uses `NostrIdentity` without modifying its internals.
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3. **The hash functions** (`sha256`, `hmac_sha256`) use Python's `hashlib` which delegates to OpenSSL — these are constant-time.
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4. **The JSON serialization** in `sign_event()` is deterministic and doesn't leak timing.
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---
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## Recommended Fix (Full Remediation)
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### Priority 1: Replace with secp256k1-py or coincurve (IMMEDIATE)
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The fastest, most reliable fix is to stop using the pure-Python implementation entirely:
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```python
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# nostr_identity.py — replacement using coincurve
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import coincurve
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import hashlib
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import json
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import os
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class NostrIdentity:
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def __init__(self, privkey_hex=None):
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if privkey_hex:
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self.privkey = bytes.fromhex(privkey_hex)
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else:
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self.privkey = os.urandom(32)
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self.pubkey = coincurve.PrivateKey(self.privkey).public_key.format(compressed=True)[1:].hex()
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def sign_event(self, event):
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event_data = [0, event['pubkey'], event['created_at'], event['kind'], event['tags'], event['content']]
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serialized = json.dumps(event_data, separators=(',', ':'))
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msg_hash = hashlib.sha256(serialized.encode()).digest()
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event['id'] = msg_hash.hex()
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# Use libsecp256k1's BIP340 Schnorr (constant-time C implementation)
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event['sig'] = coincurve.PrivateKey(self.privkey).sign_schnorr(msg_hash).hex()
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return event
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```
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**Effort:** ~2 hours (swap implementation, add `coincurve` to `requirements.txt`, test)
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**Risk:** Adds a C dependency. If pure-Python is required (sovereignty constraint), use Priority 2.
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### Priority 2: Pure-Python Constant-Time Rewrite (IF PURE PYTHON REQUIRED)
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If the sovereignty constraint (no C dependencies) must be maintained, rewrite the elliptic curve operations:
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1. **Replace `point_mul`** with Montgomery ladder (constant-time by design)
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2. **Replace `point_add`** with Jacobian coordinate addition that always performs both doubling and addition, selecting with arithmetic masking
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3. **Replace `inverse`** with extended binary GCD with blinding
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4. **Fix nonce generation** to follow RFC6979 or BIP340 tagged hashes
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5. **Fix key generation** to use rejection sampling
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**Effort:** ~8-12 hours (careful implementation + test vectors from BIP340 spec)
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**Risk:** Pure-Python crypto is inherently slower (~100ms per signature vs ~1ms with libsecp256k1)
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### Priority 3: Hybrid Approach
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Use `coincurve` when available, fall back to pure-Python with warnings:
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```python
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try:
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import coincurve
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USE_LIB = True
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except ImportError:
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USE_LIB = False
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import warnings
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warnings.warn("Using pure-Python Schnorr — vulnerable to timing attacks. Install coincurve for production use.")
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```
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**Effort:** ~3 hours
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---
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## Effort Estimate
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| Fix | Effort | Risk Reduction | Recommended |
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|-----|--------|----------------|-------------|
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| Replace with coincurve (Priority 1) | 2h | Eliminates all timing issues | YES — do this |
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| Pure-Python constant-time rewrite (Priority 2) | 8-12h | Eliminates timing issues | Only if no-C constraint is firm |
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| Hybrid (Priority 3) | 3h | Full for installed, partial for fallback | Good compromise |
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| Findings doc + PR (this work) | 2h | Documents the problem | DONE |
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---
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## Test Vectors
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The BIP340 specification includes test vectors at https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-00340/test-vectors.csv
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Any replacement implementation MUST pass all test vectors before deployment.
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---
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## Conclusion
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The pure-Python BIP340 Schnorr implementation in `NostrIdentity` is **vulnerable to timing side-channel attacks** that could recover the private key. The primary issue is branch-dependent execution in scalar multiplication and point addition. The fastest fix is replacing with `coincurve` (libsecp256k1 binding). If pure-Python sovereignty is required, a constant-time rewrite using Montgomery ladder and arithmetic masking is needed.
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The JS-side `NostrAgent` in `app.js` uses mock signatures and is not affected.
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**Recommendation:** Ship `coincurve` replacement immediately. It's 2 hours of work and eliminates the entire attack surface.
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