Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Report blocking now applies iff scripts are blocked.
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On Firefox, original CSP headers are now smuggled (signed) in an x-orig-csp
header to prevent re-processing issues with caching. Additionally, a default
header is added for non-whitelisted domains in case there are no existing
headers we can attach to.
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CSP headers are now parsed and processed, rather than treated as simple
units. This allows us to ensure policies delivered as HTTP headers do not
interfere with our script filtering, as well as to preserve useful protections
while removing the ones that could be problematic. Additionally, prefetching
should now be blocked on pages where native scripts aren't allowed, and
all reporting of CSP violations has been stripped (is this appropriate?).
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The parsing function isn't used yet; however, it will eventually be as a less
destructive alternative to handling headers as indivisible units.
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from the copyright file
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The base URL is now included in the settings. The unique value no longer uses
it directly, as it is included by virtue of the settings; however, the number
of full hours since the epoch (UTC) is now incorporated.
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Signatures, instead of consisting of the secure salt followed by the unique
value generated from the URL, are now the unique value generated from the
policy value (which will follow them) succeeded by the URL.
CSP headers are now _always_ cleared on FF, regardless of whether the page
is whitelisted or not. This means whitelisting takes effect on page reload,
rather than only when caching occurs. However, it obviously presents security
issues; refinment will occur in a future commit.
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Increase the power of URL-based smuggling by making it (effectively)
compulsory in all cases and adapting a <salt><unique value><JSON-encoded
settings> structure. While the details still need to be worked out, the
potential for future expansion is there.
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Nonces are now randomly generated, either in the page (for non-HTTP(S) pages)
or by a background module which stores them by tab and frame IDs. In order to
support the increased variance in nonce-generating methods and allow them to
be loaded from the background, handle_page_actions is now invoked separately
according to (non-)blocking mechanism.
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Default settings are now provided in the same format as data exported from the
extension, incorporating them into the main program as part of the build
process. Also, modify their contents; the apparently non-functional FSF stuff
is gone, replaced with fixes for BandCamp, WorldCat, and SumOfUs.
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In-page blocking now works on Firefox, and JavaScript/data- URLs are properly
blocked to ensure no JavaScript leaks in through backdoors. Blocking of HTML/XML
data: urls should be refined (eventually) to align with current practice for
pages in general.
Also, script-blocking is now filtered by nonce, making it possible (albeit
perhaps not desirable) to inject scripts before the DOM is complete.
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This patch fixes storage initialization on Gecko browsers by switching from
using a background page to using a list of scripts. It remains a mystery why
that should have any effect; the only hint is that browser.runtime.onInstalled
does not fire when called from a script loaded in a background page.
Signed-off-by: jahoti <jahoti@tilde.team>
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adding a <meta> tag
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complex payloads
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