The story of how I could steal credentials on Infosec Mastodon with a HTML injection vulnerability, without needing to bypass CSP.

Everybody on our Twitter feed seemed to be jumping ship to the infosec.exchange Mastodon server, so I decided to see what the fuss was all about. After figuring out why exactly you had to have loads of @ symbols in your username, I began to have a look at how secure it was. If you’ve followed me on Twitter you’ll know I like to post vectors and test the limits of the app I’m using, and today was no exception.

First, I began testing to see if HTML or Markdown was supported. I did a couple of “tweets” to see if you could have code blocks (how cool would that be?) but nothing seemed to work. That is, until @ret2bed pointed out that you could change your preferences to enable HTML! That’s right people, a social network that enables you to post HTML - what could possibly go wrong?

I enabled this handy preference and redid my tests. Markdown seemed pretty limited. I was mainly hoping for code blocks but they didn’t materialise. I switched to testing HTML and tested for basic stuff like bold tags, which seemed to work on the web but not on mobile. Whilst I was testing, @securitymb gave me a link to their HTML filter source code and he showed me a very interesting vector where they were decoding entities.

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