cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/4273025

You can upload images to a Lemmy instance without anyone knowing that the image is there if the admins are not regularly checking their pictrs database.

To do this, you create a post on any Lemmy instance, upload an image, and never click the “Create” button. The post is never created but the image is uploaded. Because the post isn’t created, nobody knows that the image is uploaded.

You can also go to any post, upload a picture in the comment, copy the URL and never post the comment. You can also upload an image as your avatar or banner and just close the tab. The image will still reside in the server.

You can (possibly) do the same with community icons and banners.

Why does this matter?

Because anyone can upload illegal images without the admin knowing and the admin will be liable for it. With everything that has been going on lately, I wanted to remind all of you about this. Don’t think that disabling cache is enough. Bad actors can secretly stash illegal images on your Lemmy instance if you aren’t checking!

These bad actors can then share these links around and you would never know! They can report it to the FBI and if you haven’t taken it down (because you did not know) for a certain period, say goodbye to your instance and see you in court.

Only your backend admins who have access to the database (or object storage or whatever) can check this, meaning non-backend admins and moderators WILL NOT BE ABLE TO MONITOR THESE, and regular users WILL NOT BE ABLE TO REPORT THESE.

Aren’t these images deleted if they aren’t used for the post/comment/banner/avatar/icon?

NOPE! The image actually stays uploaded! Lemmy doesn’t check if the images are used! Try it out yourself. Just make sure to copy the link by copying the link text or copying it by clicking the image then “copy image link”.

How come this hasn’t been addressed before?

I don’t know. I am fairly certain that this has been brought up before. Nobody paid attention but I’m bringing it up again after all the shit that happened in the past week. I can’t even find it on the GitHub issue tracker.

I’m an instance administrator, what the fuck do I do?

Check your pictrs images (good luck) or nuke it. Disable pictrs, restrict sign ups, or watch your database like a hawk. You can also delete your instance.

Good luck.

  • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    seems like the solution to this should be to automatically remove images that haven’t been posted, after like 3 minutes

      • Kitikuru@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        The 3 minutes would only kick in if an image was uploaded but then never posted. So nobody would see it anyway in any case.

        This route would avoid the issue but also help save on space too.

        • Racle@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          What happens if user spends over 3 minutes to write the post after uploading image?

          Would user create a post with broken image link? or would there be some kind of “call home” API call on create post page so image wouldn’t be removed? (which has risk that API call could be replicated by a bot)

          • Kitikuru@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            That is a good point. Could potentially not upload the image until the post is created instead of at image choosing, which would also alleviate the issue. But I’m not sure how that would work across web and mobile clients.

          • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 year ago

            Could allow for like one hour of keep-alive pings before it’s deleted and the client is told to notify the user of this

            Also: rate limits that gradually increase are good.

            • CptMuesli@artemis.camp
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              1 year ago

              This could be handled by the client. Get the Ruleset for image uploads (max size, format, etc.), Validate the image within the client, only upload when the post is published.
              Then the delay between post and image only depends on your internet connection and the user can still take 3 hours to write a post.

        • russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net
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          1 year ago

          As in when you’d normally get automatically logged out? If so, I’m not sure that would work since Lemmy uses JWTs that don’t expire (or if they do, not for a very long time) it seems.

    • Venat0r@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Or make it like 1hr and don’t let the user know the url of the uploaded image until they post it, that way it wouldn’t be able to be shared or reported.

    • Kayn@dormi.zone
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      1 year ago

      Your contributions to the Lemmy ecosystem are much appreciated 🙏🏼

    • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I hate how everything is a double edged sword, because this is now also the perfect tool for making sure your CSAM doesn’t trip the filter. Also, it uses CLIP so a simple obfuscation overlay would render it useless.

        • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Any of filter or image processing technique that fools machine vision.

          Example: https://sandlab.cs.uchicago.edu/fawkes/

          At a high level, Fawkes “poisons” models that try to learn what you look like, by putting hidden changes into your photos, and using themn as Trojan horses to deliver that poison to any facial recognition models of you.

          This could be done with any kind of image or detail, not just faces.

          • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 year ago

            I don’t think random trolls like that would be be that sophisticated, but in any case we can deal with that once we get to that point.

  • Tetsuo@jlai.lu
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    1 year ago

    I’m usually pretty relaxed when it comes to disclosure of vulnerabilities but this is the kind of issues where I think it would have been better to privately report the issue to the Lemmy dev and wait ( a long time probably) for it to be fixed before disclosing.

    Especially since currently there is multiple people abusing the image hosting feature.

    Not a big deal, but sometimes it is actually a better practice to give an opportunity to the dev to fix something before forcing them to do so in a hurry.

    • bmygsbvur@lemmy.caOP
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      1 year ago

      I’ve mentioned this before to a similar reply. But I’ll say it again: this was already publicly known months ago. People just forgot about it because they didn’t think it was a big deal. Now that they realize CSAM is a real issue, I made this post to remind everyone about it again. Bad actors already know about this and really, it isn’t hard to figure out how this work.

    • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Eh… Better make it public so you don’t have people taking a chance with hosting CSAM!

    • CaptObvious
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      1 year ago

      Nah. Where’s the drama and FUD in behaving like adults? Much better to make a brand new account and spam moral panic all over the fediverse. /smh

  • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    Or just disable image uploads completely. We got by on Reddit without any built-in image hosting functionality for over a decade, so Lemmy should be fine without it as well - especially considering that we don’t really have many image-heavy communities, besides the NSFW instances. I mean, storage costs money you know, and with Lemmy being run by volunteers, it makes even more sense to get rid of image hosting to save costs.

      • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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        1 year ago

        This can be easily implemented client-side, like how third-party Reddit clients have been doing for years, by uploading to the likes of Imgur. Shift the responsibility away from the Lemmy server and onto dedicated image hosts, who have the storage to spare, plus manpower/policies to deal with illegal content.

          • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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            1 year ago

            Desktop users exist

            So do Desktop tools like Flameshot, which can directly upload to image hosts and copy the URL to the clipboard which makes it easy to share images, and there also exists third-party Desktop web-clients such as Photon, which could be updated with that functionality as well. But with Lemmy itself being open source, it wouldn’t take much effort to modify the code to use a third-party image host.

            have a history of deciding to forbid hotlinking

            There are plenty of hosts which do allow hotlinking though, like imgbb.com

            history of suddenly deleting all (e.g. PhotoBucket) or some (e.g. Imgur) images .

            Not a big loss, IMO. Lemmy isn’t an image hosting nor an image-centric site, it’s a text-heavy forum at first instance, and anyone posting images are encouraged to provide text alts for the benefit of blind users, so images not persisting isn’t a big deal.

            If image persistence is really that important, there are other services which are better suited for that, such as Pixelfed. But in the first place, I wouldn’t rely on some random Lemmy server, which is vulnerable to DDoS and other attacks and could go down at any time (also why the importance on decentralization - no single instance is infallible). I mean, when there’s no guarantee that a Lemmy instance will even be there tomorrow, is there really a need to worry about image persistence?

  • planish@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Why does Lemmy even ship its own image host? There are plenty of places to upload images you want to post that are already good at hosting images, arguably better than pictrs is for some applications. Running your own opens up whole categories of new problems like this that are inessential to running a federated link aggregator. People selfhost Lemmy and turn around and dump the images for “their” image host in S3 anyway.

    We should all get out of the image hosting business unless we really want to be there.

    • Gecko@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Convenience for end-users and avoiding link rot is probably one of the reasons.

      • BitOneZero @ .world@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        and avoiding link rot

        Lemmy seems built to destroy information, rot links. Unlike Reddit has been for 15 years, when a person deletes their account Lemmy removes all posts and comments, creating a black hole.

        Not only are the comments disappeared from the person who deleted their account, all the comments made by other users disappear on those posts and comments.

        Right now, a single user just deleting one comment results in the entire branch of comment replies to just disappear.

        Installing an instance was done pretty quickly… over 1000 new instances went online in June because of the Reddit API change. But once that instance goes offline, all the communities hosted there are orphaned and no cleanup code really exists to salvage any of it - because the whole system was built around deleting comments and posts - and deleting an instance is pretty much a purging of everything they ever created in the minds of the designers.

      • planish@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Seems to not be paying off though; having whole communities and instances close is pretty inconvenient.

  • gencha@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    This is not unique to Lemmy. You can do the same on Slack, Discord, Teams, GitHub, … Finding unused resources isn’t trivial, and you’re usually better off ignoring the noise.

    If you upload illegal content somewhere, and then tell the FBI about it, being the only person knowing the URL, let me know how that turns out.

  • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    This is how it works. Since pictrs and Lemmy are two completely different applications (they even run in two different containers with two different databases) they do not communicate and tracking what images belong to what post or comment simply isn’t possible in the current state I guess.

    How come this hasn’t been addressed before?

    This is how the Fediverse works. There is so much bad practices, so much haphazardly implemented functionality and so much bad API documentation all over the place that I wonder why nothing has extremely exploded so far. We don’t even have proper data protection and everything is replicated to everywhere causing a shitload of legal issues all over the workd but no-one seems to care so far.

    • danwardvs@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      This isn’t unique to Lemmy or haphazard coding. It’s a common technique to get pictures into Github READMEs this way. You’d create a PR, upload an image, copy the link, delete the PR, and then paste the link elsewhere on Github for use.

    • eleanor@social.hamington.net
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      1 year ago

      The difference between the Fediverse and a closed system like reddit is that it’s open and we’re privy to haphazardly implemented functionality and bad API documentation.

      I work on big closed source web apps for a living; they’re just as haphazard and badly documented, it’s just all closed.

  • drkt@feddit.dk
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    1 year ago

    In theory also possible to just be a nuisance by filling out the instances available space? That sounds like it’s gonna get fixed one way or another.

  • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    the admin will be liable for it.

    These bad actors can then share these links around and you would never know! They can report it to the FBI and if you haven’t taken it down (because you did not know) for a certain period, say goodbye to your instance and see you in court.

    In most jurisdictions this is not now it would work. Even a less tech savvy investigator would figure out that it was an online community not obviously affiliated with CSAM, and focus on alerting you and getting the content removed.

    There’s this misunderstanding that CSAM is some sort of instant go-to-prison situation, but it really does depend on context. It’s generally not so easy to just plant illegal files and tip off the FBI, because the FBI is strategic enough not to be weaponized like that. Keep an eye on your abuse and admin email inboxes, and take action as soon as you see something, and nobody is going to shut you down or drag you to court.

    • bmygsbvur@lemmy.caOP
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      1 year ago

      Doesn’t change the fact that this is an issue that needs to be resolved.

      • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Never said otherwise, I just want to make sure we’re not scaring people away from Lemmy administration and moderation, as if they were risking going to prison as a child sex offender or something.

  • kool_newt@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    This is just like how someone could put printed CSAM behind a bush in my yard or something and some authorities could decide to hold me responsible.

  • CaptObvious
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    1 year ago

    I can’t be the only one getting bored with the 8-hr-old accounts spreading FUD.

    If you have a legitimate concern, post it from your proper account. Otherwise it looks like you’re just trolling for Spez. It’s pathetic, really.

    • sonstwas@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Additionally this isn’t the community where this needs to be addressed. Either contact the admins or open an issue on GitHub.

    • bmygsbvur@lemmy.caOP
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      Most admins aren’t in the USA. But that’s not really the issue here is it?

    • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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      Are individuals granted the same 230 protections as organizations when it comes to self-hosting an instance? I doubt people are forming non-profits for their self hosting endeavors

        • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Thank you! That’s a clear and concise explanation of section 230. I’ve always heard it in reference to big social media companies but your link clearly shows the protections extend to individuals and users as well

    • bmygsbvur@lemmy.caOP
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      I’m not on GitHub. Someone else can submit it this and I’m very sure the Lemmy devs are aware. They just have different priorities.

  • spiritedpause@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    There really needs to be an option for instances to upload images to imgur using their API.

    imgur has been hosting images for years, and has the resources and experience to deal with stuff like CSAM.

    It shouldn’t be the default/only option that hosting an instance means having to open the floodgates for anyone to upload images to their servers.

    From a liability standpoint alone, it’s an absurd thing to just expect every instance to accept.