I think I was refreshing my profile or notifications page (forget which). As it was loading for ~1—2 seconds my screen color theme changed and in the top right corner I saw someone else’s userID, then it quickly reverted back to my theme and userID.
As fast as it happened I only took mental note of the first half of the other userID, which happened to match that of the admin. I described the colors I saw in that 1—2 second timeframe to the admin who confirmed it was indeed the color theme they configured for their environment (which differs from the default).
I clearly had the admin’s session for a second or two. It was so quick that a malicious user probably could not do anything malicious. But of course just as I have no idea how I apparently got the admin’s cookie for a second or two, I have no idea how I got back my cookie. Maybe if I had quickly hit ESC mid-loading the access breach could have been sustained.
#lemmyBug
As usual, this bug report is posted here because the official bug tracker is jailed in MS Github. I should add that Microsoft supports those responsible for the death of Hind Rajab by financing AnyVision, which is good cause to boycott Microsoft.
Normally I’d agree that unauthenticated privilege escalation to administrator account is something that should only ever be reported privately, but this sounds more like a caching bug on the sopuli instance, in which case OP didn’t actually have (theoretical) access to the cookie, although it may be something else. It also brings to attention the lack of published email and optional PGP for reporting. Though, that it was the admin account makes me wonder if the admin wasn’t tinkering with something, causing this to happen for a split second.
@freedomPusher@sopuli.xyz I’m curious to hear the response from the admin, will you ping me if they don’t mind you sharing their response?
The only interesting bit from the admin was to concur that the color theme I saw in fact matched their personal color theme. But I just put the admin in the loop here in case there is more to say.
At the time when I got the message, I wasn’t doing any kind of tinkering with the instance.
I have seen a caching (I believe) issue on an nginx/Express service where the POST payload was valid but much larger than normally expected, and it returned all of the companies customer’s orders in the queue instead of only ours. On refresh, it was fine. It never did get fixed as far as I know as they had trouble reproducing it even though I provided video and steps multiple times. I wasn’t able to produce a PoC script because it was linked to the order/payment process, and wouldn’t go through twice without payment. I don’t know for sure it was a caching issue in the end, but the similarity should be noted.
To add to that, there was probably at most a few minutes gap between what I experienced and sending the message.