I assume it has to do with code filtering out attempts to inject HTML / scripts into comments. Lemmy had a bunch of bugs that allowed hackers to inject Javascript so they turned on quite an aggressive filter.
They fucked it up completely in a way that raises questions of competence.
HTML has ways to display angle brackets specifically intended to never be interpreted as tags. “Entity names” will never be code. There’s not even a sensible way to do it deliberately, like %20 nonsense.
Allowing tainted data in to the dataset means every single client has to do every single spot of content rendering correctly or else be vulnerable to easy hacking. Keeping it out of the dataset means not all clients have to be perfect for Lemmy to be a secure place.
I’m a fan of the swiss cheese model of safety. While blindly blocking arbitrary characters is a bit silly, not filtering/encoding the data even on the output from web services can end up in disaster.
It’s an open API that serves publicly-sourced data. I’d not want to serve up anything more than markup content even if every single API call had perfect handling. At least not without a lot more sophisticated filtering in front of it. Even certain totally valid arrangements of HTML can be vulnerable as all hell.
Even certain markup systems have problems, but I doubt this one has huge vulnerabilities to exploit. Certain wiki systems in the past had to be completely retired over such things.
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Lemmy removed part of my content, apparently putting stuff between < and > breaks it? I’ll edit my comment.
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I assume it has to do with code filtering out attempts to inject HTML / scripts into comments. Lemmy had a bunch of bugs that allowed hackers to inject Javascript so they turned on quite an aggressive filter.
They fucked it up completely in a way that raises questions of competence.
HTML has ways to display angle brackets specifically intended to never be interpreted as tags. “Entity names” will never be code. There’s not even a sensible way to do it deliberately, like %20 nonsense.
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Could have done it with proper encoding, don’t need to remove it lol o.O
Allowing tainted data in to the dataset means every single client has to do every single spot of content rendering correctly or else be vulnerable to easy hacking. Keeping it out of the dataset means not all clients have to be perfect for Lemmy to be a secure place.
The point of encoding, the process of representing data in a different way, is to have the data set not be tainted. :)
Here, for example: https://www.w3schools.com/html/html_entities.asp
I’m a fan of the swiss cheese model of safety. While blindly blocking arbitrary characters is a bit silly, not filtering/encoding the data even on the output from web services can end up in disaster.
It’s an open API that serves publicly-sourced data. I’d not want to serve up anything more than markup content even if every single API call had perfect handling. At least not without a lot more sophisticated filtering in front of it. Even certain totally valid arrangements of HTML can be vulnerable as all hell.
Even certain markup systems have problems, but I doubt this one has huge vulnerabilities to exploit. Certain wiki systems in the past had to be completely retired over such things.
we’re having a stroke together
Am all in on this stroke as well.