While I was asleep, apparently the site was hacked. Luckily, (big) part of the lemmy.world team is in US, and some early birds in EU also helped mitigate this.

As I am told, this was the issue:

  • There is an vulnerability which was exploited
  • Several people had their JWT cookies leaked, including at least one admin
  • Attackers started changing site settings and posting fake announcements etc

Our mitigations:

  • We removed the vulnerability
  • Deleted all comments and private messages that contained the exploit
  • Rotated JWT secret which invalidated all existing cookies

The vulnerability will be fixed by the Lemmy devs.

Details of the vulnerability are here

Many thanks for all that helped, and sorry for any inconvenience caused!

Update While we believe the admins accounts were what they were after, it could be that other users accounts were compromised. Your cookie could have been ‘stolen’ and the hacker could have had access to your account, creating posts and comments under your name, and accessing/changing your settings (which shows your e-mail).

For this, you would have had to be using lemmy.world at that time, and load a page that had the vulnerability in it.

  • AlmightySnoo 🐢🇮🇱🇺🇦
    link
    131 year ago

    One thing I don’t get. Custom emojis can only be created by an admin, but you’re saying an admin’s account here got compromised because of that and not the other way around. Does that mean that an evil instance set a custom emoji with the injected JavaScript and propagated it to the federated instances?

    • Calyhre
      link
      11
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      From the fix, I believe the custom emojis were not double checked after a user submits a post. The post data was used to display the emojis, and thus allowing injection.

      The fix now is to search the emojis in the custom emojis list from the backend rather than the user post.