Arkose Protect

Arkose Protect is used on GitLab.com and is not supported for self-managed GitLab instances. The following documents the internal requirements for maintaining Arkose Protect on GitLab.com. While this feature is theoretically usable in self-managed instances, it is not recommended at the moment.

GitLab integrates Arkose Protect to guard against malicious users from creating accounts.

How does it work?

If Arkose Protect determines that the user is suspicious, it presents an interactive challenge below the Sign in button. The challenge needs to be completed to proceed with the sign-in attempt. If Arkose Protect trusts the user, the challenge runs in transparent mode, meaning that the user doesn’t need to take any additional action and can sign in as usual.

sequenceDiagram participant U as User participant G as GitLab participant A as Arkose Labs U->>G: User loads signup form G->>A: Sends device fingerprint and telemetry A->>U: Returns Session token and decision on if to challenge opt Requires Challenge U->>U: User interacts with Challenge iframe end U->>G: Submits form with Arkose Labs token G ->> A: Sends token to be verified A ->> G: Returns verification response Note over G: records `UserCustomAttribute::risk_band` alt session_details.solved == true G ->> U: Proceed else session_details.solved == false G ->> U: Do not proceed end

How do we treat malicious sign-up attempts?

Depending on the risk score received, a user might be required to perform up to three stages of identity verification to register an account.

Configuration

To enable Arkose Protect:

  1. License ArkoseLabs.
  2. Get the public and private API keys from the ArkoseLabs Portal.
  3. Enable the ArkoseLabs login challenge. Run the following commands in the Rails console, replacing <your_public_api_key> and <your_private_api_key> with your own API keys.

    ApplicationSetting.current.update(arkose_labs_public_api_key: '<your_public_api_key>')
    ApplicationSetting.current.update(arkose_labs_private_api_key: '<your_private_api_key>')
    

Triage and debug ArkoseLabs issues

You can triage and debug issues raised by ArkoseLabs with:

View ArkoseLabs Verify API response for a user session

To view an ArkoseLabs Verify API response for a user, query the GitLab production logs with the following KQL:

KQL: json.message:"Arkose verify response" AND json.username:replace_username_here

If the query is valid, the result contains debug information about the user’s session:

Response Description
json.response.session_details.suppressed Value is true if the challenge was not shown to the user. Always true if the user is allowlisted.
json.arkose.risk_band Can be low, medium, or high. Ignored on sign in. Use to debug identity verification issues.
json.response.session_details.solved Indicates whether the user solved the challenge. Always true if the user is allowlisted.
json.response.session_details.previously_verified Indicates whether the token has been reused. Default is false. If true, it might indicate malicious activity.

Check if a user failed an ArkoseLabs challenge

To check if a user failed to sign in because the ArkoseLabs challenge was not solved, query the GitLab production logs with the following KQL:

KQL: json.message:"Challenge was not solved" AND json.username:replace_username_here

Allowlists

To ensure end-to-end QA test suites can pass during staging and production, we’ve allowlisted the GITLAB_QA_USER_AGENT. Each QA user receives an ALLOWLIST risk category.

You can find the usage of the allowlist telltale in our Arkose::VerifyResponse class.

Feedback Job

To help Arkose improve their protection service, we created a daily background job to send them the list of blocked users by us. This job is performed by the Arkose::BlockedUsersReportWorker class.

Test your integration

History
  • Requesting specific behaviors with Data Exchange introduced in GitLab 16.8 with a flag named arkose_labs_signup_data_exchange. Disabled by default.

In staging and development environments only, you can suppress a challenge, or force one to appear. You can use this feature if you want to receive a specific risk band.

To force a challenge, change your browser user agent string. You can find the appropriate string in 1Password.

Alternatively, to request specific behaviors, enable the arkose_labs_signup_data_exchange feature flag and modify the Data Exchange payload to include an interactive field with any of the following values:

  • 'true' - Force a challenge to appear.
  • 'false' - Suppress a challenge. If you suppress a challenge, ArkoseLabs considers your session safe.

For example, the following diff updates the payload to suppress the challenge:

diff --git a/ee/lib/arkose/data_exchange_payload.rb b/ee/lib/arkose/data_exchange_payload.rb
index 191ae0b5cf82..b2d888b98c95 100644
--- a/ee/lib/arkose/data_exchange_payload.rb
+++ b/ee/lib/arkose/data_exchange_payload.rb
@@ -35,6 +35,7 @@ def json_data
       now = Time.current.to_i
 
       data = {
+        interactive: 'false',
         timestamp: now.to_s, # required to be a string
         "HEADER_user-agent" => request.user_agent,
         "HEADER_origin" => request.origin,

Additional resources

The Anti-abuse team owns the ArkoseLabs Protect feature. You can join our ArkoseLabs/GitLab collaboration channel on Slack: #ext-gitlab-arkose.

ArkoseLabs also maintains the following resources: