Impact
During file downloads, yt-dlp or the external downloaders that yt-dlp employs may leak cookies on HTTP redirects to a different host, or leak them when the host for download fragments differs from their parent manifest's host.
This vulnerable behavior is present in all versions of youtube-dl, youtube-dlc and yt-dlp released since 2015.01.25. All native and external downloaders are affected, except for curl
and httpie
(httpie version 3.1.0 or later).
At the file download stage, all cookies are passed by yt-dlp to the file downloader as a Cookie
header, thereby losing their scope. This also occurs in yt-dlp's info JSON output, which may be used by external tools. As a result, the downloader or external tool may indiscriminately send cookies with requests to domains or paths for which the cookies are not scoped.
An example of a potential attack scenario exploiting this vulnerability:
- an attacker has crafted a malicious website with an embedded URL designed to be detected by yt-dlp as a video download. This embedded URL has the domain of a trusted site that the user has loaded cookies for, and conducts an unvalidated redirect to a target URL.
- yt-dlp extracts this URL and calculates a
Cookie
header based on its domain for the file downloader to make its request(s) with.
- the download URL redirects to a server controlled by the attacker, to which yt-dlp forwards the user's sensitive cookie information.
Patches
yt-dlp version 2023.07.06 fixes this issue by doing the following:
- Remove the
Cookie
header upon HTTP redirects
- Have native downloaders calculate their own
Cookie
header from the cookiejar
- Utilize external downloaders' built-in support for cookies instead of passing them as header arguments
- If the external downloader does not have proper cookie support, then disable HTTP redirection (
axel
only)
- Process cookies passed as HTTP headers to limit their scope (
--add-header "Cookie:..."
is scoped to input URL domain only)
- Store cookies in a separate
cookies
field of the info dict instead of http_headers
so as not to lose their scope
Patches for youtube-dl are expected and we will update this advisory when they are merged.
Workarounds
It is recommended to upgrade yt-dlp to version 2023.07.06 as soon as possible.
For users who are not able to upgrade:
- Avoid using cookies and user authentication methods (
--cookies
, --cookies-from-browser
, --username
, --password
, --netrc
). While extractors may set custom cookies, these usually do not contain sensitive information.
- Avoid using
--load-info-json
Or, if authentication is a must:
- Verify the integrity of download links from unknown sources in browser (including redirects) before passing them to yt-dlp
- Use
curl
as external downloader, since it is not impacted (--downloader curl
)
- Avoid fragmented formats such as HLS/m3u8, DASH/mpd and ISM (use
-f "(bv*+ba/b)[protocol~='^https?$']"
)
References
References
Impact
During file downloads, yt-dlp or the external downloaders that yt-dlp employs may leak cookies on HTTP redirects to a different host, or leak them when the host for download fragments differs from their parent manifest's host.
This vulnerable behavior is present in all versions of youtube-dl, youtube-dlc and yt-dlp released since 2015.01.25. All native and external downloaders are affected, except for
curl
andhttpie
(httpie version 3.1.0 or later).At the file download stage, all cookies are passed by yt-dlp to the file downloader as a
Cookie
header, thereby losing their scope. This also occurs in yt-dlp's info JSON output, which may be used by external tools. As a result, the downloader or external tool may indiscriminately send cookies with requests to domains or paths for which the cookies are not scoped.An example of a potential attack scenario exploiting this vulnerability:
Cookie
header based on its domain for the file downloader to make its request(s) with.Patches
yt-dlp version 2023.07.06 fixes this issue by doing the following:
Cookie
header upon HTTP redirectsCookie
header from the cookiejaraxel
only)--add-header "Cookie:..."
is scoped to input URL domain only)cookies
field of the info dict instead ofhttp_headers
so as not to lose their scopePatches for youtube-dl are expected and we will update this advisory when they are merged.
Workarounds
It is recommended to upgrade yt-dlp to version 2023.07.06 as soon as possible.
For users who are not able to upgrade:
--cookies
,--cookies-from-browser
,--username
,--password
,--netrc
). While extractors may set custom cookies, these usually do not contain sensitive information.--load-info-json
Or, if authentication is a must:
curl
as external downloader, since it is not impacted (--downloader curl
)-f "(bv*+ba/b)[protocol~='^https?$']"
)References
References