I make and sell BusKill laptop kill cords. Monero is accepted.
This seems to suggest that you have to get it from lemmy when you first uploaded the image
Thanks, but I’m asking because I didn’t find the reference documentation especially helpful.
It says I need the “delete token” or “alias”. How do I get that for a given URL?
I’m looking for an example that describes how to construct the commands for the API calls knowing only the URL of the image.
You associate everything that can be bought with cryptocurrency as a scam? It sounds like you haven’t even read the post. I spent a lot of time making it easily accessible here on Lemmy. You don’t even have to click the link. Just scroll-up and read :)
How exactly did you come to the conclusion that this is a scam? We’re a fully open-source hardware & software project that’s been around for a few years. If you don’t want to buy from us, we go out of our way to help users build their own 3D-printed BusKill cables (currently in prototype stage).
Our software is free as in speech and free as in beer under the CC BY-SA and GNU GPL licenses.
You’d need magnets, pogo pins, wire, glue, solder, etc. The list of materials needed is listed in the “Materials” section of this article.
@Goldfishlaser@lemmy.ml can provide more info
Good bot
Theft of high-risk users’ data. Data could include private keys (eg theft of cryptocurrency assets), contacts of correspondence (eg sources of a journalist – such as whistleblowers), etc.
For more information, see the Who Uses BusKill? section of the documentation.
I’m curious if any security engineers have covered this incident.
Stripe does support generating Restricted API Keys. With “Restricted API Keys” you’re able to mint a key that can live on your e-commerce website that has permission to accept payments but does not have permission to modify your merchant account’s payout methods (eg adding a new “Instant Payments” debit card to the merchant account as this attacker did).
Unfortunately, I’ve asked WooCommerce to support Restricted API Keys 1 year ago, but they marked it as “low priority”
…I would appreciate if more people would jump-in on ^ that ticket and scold WooCommerce so that they add support for Restricted API Keys ;)
This is a big problem. At the time of writing:
How to purge images in Lemmy
pict-rs is a third-party simple image hosting service that runs along-side Lemmy for instances that allow users to upload media.
At the time of writing, there is no WUI for admins to find and delete images. You have to manually query the pict-rs database and execute an API call from the command-line. Worse: Lemmy has no documentation telling instance admins how to delete images 🤦
For the purposes of this example, let's assume you're trying to delete the following image
https://monero.town/pictrs/image/001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp
There are two API endpoints in pict-rs that can be used to delete an image
Method One: /image/delete/{delete_token}/{alias}
This API call is publicly-accessible, but it first requires you to obtain the image's `
delete_token
`The `
delete_token
` is first returned by Lemmy when POSTing to the `/pictrs/image
` endpoint{ "msg":"ok", "files":[ { "file":"001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp", "delete_token":"d88b7f32-a56f-4679-bd93-4f334764d381" } ] }
Two pieces of information are returned here:
Of course, if you didn't capture this image's `
delete_token
` at upload-time, then you must fetch it from the postgres DB.First, open a shell on your running postgres container. If you installed Lemmy with docker compose, use `
docker compose ps
` to get the "SERVICE" name of your postgres host, and then enter it with `docker exec
`docker compose ps --format "table {{.Service}}\t{{.Image}}\t{{.Name}}" docker compose exec <docker_service_name> /bin/bash
For example:
user@host:/home/user/lemmy# docker compose ps --format "table {{.Service}}\t{{.Image}}\t{{.Name}}" SERVICE IMAGE NAME lemmy dessalines/lemmy:0.19.3 lemmy-lemmy-1 lemmy-ui dessalines/lemmy-ui:0.19.3 lemmy-lemmy-ui-1 pictrs docker.io/asonix/pictrs:0.5.4 lemmy-pictrs-1 postfix docker.io/mwader/postfix-relay lemmy-postfix-1 postgres docker.io/postgres:15-alpine lemmy-postgres-1 proxy docker.io/library/nginx lemmy-proxy-1 user@host:/home/user/lemmy# user@host:/home/user/lemmy# docker compose exec postgres /bin/bash postgres:/#
Connect to the database as the `
lemmy
` userFor example
postgres:/# psql -U lemmy psql (15.5) Type "help" for help. lemmy=#
Query for the image by the "alias" (the filename)
select * from image_upload where pictrs_alias = '<image_filename>';
For example
lemmy=# select * from image_upload where pictrs_alias = '001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp'; local_user_id | pictrs_alias | pictrs_delete_token | published ---------------+--------------+---------------------+----------- 1149 | 001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp | d88b7f32-a56f-4679-bd93-4f334764d381 | 2024-02-07 11:10:17.158741+00 (1 row) lemmy=#
Now, take the `
pictrs_delete_token
` from the above output, and use it to delete the image.The following command should be able to be run on any computer connected to the internet.
curl -i "https://<instance_domain>/pictrs/image/delete/<pictrs_delete_token>/<image_filename>"
For example:
user@disp9140:~$ curl -i "https://monero.town/pictrs/image/delete/d88b7f32-a56f-4679-bd93-4f334764d381/001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp" HTTP/2 204 No Content server: nginx date: Fri, 09 Feb 2024 15:37:48 GMT vary: Origin, Access-Control-Request-Method, Access-Control-Request-Headers cache-control: private referrer-policy: same-origin x-content-type-options: nosniff x-frame-options: DENY x-xss-protection: 1; mode=block X-Firefox-Spdy: h2 user@disp9140:~$
The image should be deleted.
Method Two: /internal/purge?alias={alias}
Alternatively, you could execute the deletion directly inside the pictrs container. This eliminates the need to fetch the `
delete_token
`.First, open a shell on your running `
pictrs
` container. If you installed Lemmy with docker compose, use `docker compose ps
` to get the "SERVICE" name of your postgres host, and then enter it with `docker exec
`docker compose ps --format "table {{.Service}}\t{{.Image}}\t{{.Name}}" docker compose exec <docker_service_name> /bin/sh
For example:
user@host:/home/user/lemmy# docker compose ps --format "table {{.Service}}\t{{.Image}}\t{{.Name}}" SERVICE IMAGE NAME lemmy dessalines/lemmy:0.19.3 lemmy-lemmy-1 lemmy-ui dessalines/lemmy-ui:0.19.3 lemmy-lemmy-ui-1 pictrs docker.io/asonix/pictrs:0.5.4 lemmy-pictrs-1 postfix docker.io/mwader/postfix-relay lemmy-postfix-1 postgres docker.io/postgres:15-alpine lemmy-postgres-1 proxy docker.io/library/nginx lemmy-proxy-1 user@host:/home/user/lemmy# user@host:/home/user/lemmy# docker compose exec pictrs /bin/sh ~ $
Execute the following command inside the `
pictrs
` container.wget --server-response --post-data "" --header "X-Api-Token: ${PICTRS__SERVER__API_KEY}" "http://127.0.0.1:8080/internal/purge?alias=<image_filename>"
For example:
~ $ wget --server-response --post-data "" --header "X-Api-Token: ${PICTRS__SERVER__API_KEY}" "http://127.0.0.1:8080/internal/purge?alias=001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp" Connecting to 127.0.0.1:8080 (127.0.0.1:8080) HTTP/1.1 200 OK content-length: 67 connection: close content-type: application/json date: Wed, 14 Feb 2024 12:56:24 GMT saving to 'purge?alias=001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp' purge?alias=001665df 100% |*****************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************| 67 0:00:00 ETA 'purge?alias=001665df-3b25-415f-8a59-3d836bb68dd1.webp' saved ~ $
The image should be deleted
Further Reading
Unfortunately, it seems that the Lemmy develoeprs are not taking these moral and legal (GDPR) risks seriously (they said it may take years before they address them), and they threatened to ban me for trying to highlight the severity of this risk, get them to tag GDPR-related bugs, and to prioritize them.
If GDPR-compliance is important to you on the fediverse, then please provide feedback to the Lemmy developers in the GitHub links above.
Attribution
This comment was copied from the following article: Nightmare on Lemmy Street (A Fediverse GDPR Horror Story)