Saijo George

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friday17 Jan 2020

SameSite=None; Secure Cookie Settings Coming in February 2020 on Chrome

https://webmasters.googleblog.com

In May, Chrome announced a secure-by-default model for cookies, enabled by a new cookie classification system (spec). Chrome plans to implement the new model with Chrome 80 in February 2020. Mozilla and Microsoft have also indicated an intent to implement the new model in Firefox and Edge, on their own timelines.

Today, if a cookie is only intended to be accessed in a first party context, the developer has the option to apply one of two settings (SameSite=Lax or SameSite=Strict) to prevent external access. However, very few developers follow this recommended practice, leaving a large number of same-site cookies needlessly exposed to threats such as Cross-Site Request Forgery attacks.

To safeguard more websites and their users, the new secure-by-default model assumes all cookies should be protected from external access unless otherwise specified. Developers must use a new cookie setting, SameSite=None, to designate cookies for cross-site access. When the SameSite=None attribute is present, an additional Secure attribute must be used so cross-site cookies can only be accessed over HTTPS connections.

With Chrome 80 in February, Chrome will treat cookies that have no declared SameSite value as SameSite=Lax cookies. Only cookies with the SameSite=None; Secure setting will be available for external access, provided they are being accessed from secure connections..

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