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All about the IBM 1130 Computing System

http://ibm1130.org/
1•jruohonen•1m ago•0 comments

The evolution of agentic surfaces: building with Claude Managed Agents

https://claude.com/blog/building-with-claude-managed-agents
2•gmays•7m ago•0 comments

One Messaging API is not enough

https://blog.bridgexapi.io/why-one-messaging-api-is-not-enough
2•Bridgexapi•9m ago•0 comments

UFC to pay White House fighters in crypto issued by Trump company

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/14/white-house-ufc-fighters-crypto
1•tocs3•10m ago•0 comments

Caddy compatibility for zeroserve: 3x throughput and 70% lower latency

https://su3.io/posts/zeroserve-caddy-compat
1•losfair•10m ago•0 comments

Why Research also needs to research itself

https://medium.com/researchops-community/why-research-also-needs-to-research-itself-b70fe1ee7c8e
1•adrianhoward•12m ago•0 comments

What's Coming in Swift 6.4

https://wadetregaskis.com/whats-coming-in-swift-6-4/
2•hackernows_test•13m ago•0 comments

An Attempt at Explaining Why You Want to Use Forth

https://im-just-lee.ing/forth-why-cb234c03.html
2•fallat•14m ago•2 comments

Show HN: Passport rankings weighted by where people travel

https://aiandtractors.com/passport-ranking/
1•Icons8•14m ago•1 comments

As Anthropic suspends access to new models, India debates its AI future

https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/13/as-anthropic-suspends-access-to-new-models-india-debates-its-ai...
1•01-_-•15m ago•0 comments

Zuckerberg says Meta made 'mistakes' in AI workforce shift

https://finance.yahoo.com/sectors/technology/articles/zuckerberg-says-meta-made-mistakes-in-ai-wo...
2•01-_-•16m ago•0 comments

Numerical Hints for Dyon Condensation at θ=2π

https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.13428
1•leephillips•16m ago•0 comments

We should start measuring knowledge debt like the way we do for tech debt

1•ciwolex•17m ago•0 comments

The AI Delegation Lifecycle: Your Team Has AI Outputs. Where Are the Decisions?

https://age-of-product.com/delegation-lifecycle/
1•swolpers•18m ago•0 comments

Finding the Slow Query Killing Your Rails App

https://blog.appsignal.com/2026/06/11/finding-the-slow-query-killing-your-rails-app.html
1•andreigaspar•18m ago•0 comments

Arch Linux AUR Hit by Another Wave of Now More Sophisticated Malware Attack

https://www.phoronix.com/news/Arch-Linux-AUR-More-Malware
5•ImJamal•24m ago•0 comments

AI enables 1000 people to hold a thoughtful conversation

https://bigthink.com/science-tech/collective-superintelligence/
1•bonkerbits•27m ago•1 comments

How Utahns Took on Mr. Wonderful and a Data Center on the Great Salt Lake

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/14/us/elections/kevin-oleary-utah-data-center.html
2•ChrisArchitect•34m ago•1 comments

American capitalism is run by millionaires, not billionaires

https://www.economist.com/business/2026/06/10/american-capitalism-is-run-by-millionaires-not-bill...
2•Anon84•36m ago•0 comments

A live ledger of things people wish existed captured from the BlueSky firehose

https://www.unbuilt.so
3•plural•42m ago•0 comments

Why Software, Not Drones, Will Decide the Next War

https://csis-website-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/2026-06/260610_Bondar_Defining_Autonomy.pd...
4•tow21•42m ago•2 comments

Ask HN: If 160M Americans are employed, what's the unemployment rate?

1•paganartifact•46m ago•4 comments

Everyone Was Wrong About Maximum Siphon Height [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5glksNTKkZI
2•thunderbong•50m ago•0 comments

Why my book can be downloaded for free (2014)

https://blog.plover.com/book/free-hop.html
1•downbad_•51m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Afterburner – Capability-Sandboxed JavaScript/TS Runtime in Rust

https://github.com/afterburner-sh/afterburner
1•vertexclique•52m ago•0 comments

Claude Fable 5 vs. GPT-5.5: better planning, similar execution

https://blog.kilo.ai/p/claude-fable-5-vs-gpt-5-5
3•justiceforsaas•54m ago•0 comments

AI is revolutionising the stock market

https://www.ft.com/content/b31f1e09-5aae-4cad-af15-97adb15dba70
1•thm•55m ago•0 comments

Meta‑Attention Is All You Need

https://medium.com/@vla3728419/meta-attention-is-all-you-need-650a90832d27
2•theorchid•55m ago•0 comments

Qwen 3.6 93B with MTP on 2×RTX 3090 NVLink=187 tokens/SEC,LLM lost bleat-a-thon

https://github.com/Augmented-Reality-Virtual-Reality-AR-VR/P...
3•devilfileprong•55m ago•0 comments

How did Atari apply side art to Arcade Cabinets?

https://arcadeblogger.com/2026/06/14/how-did-atari-apply-side-art-to-arcade-cabinets/
10•msephton•56m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

CRLF Injection in `–proxy-header` allows extra HTTP headers (CWE-93)

https://hackerone.com/reports/3133379
11•oblivionsage•1y ago

Comments

blueflow•1y ago
Check the man-page first. You need to know how a program is supposed to behave before you can know that an observed behavior is off-spec and warrants a bug.
robertlagrant•1y ago
I don't understand the "This is not supposed to happen". Can someone explain?

To me this is the same as

  --proxy-header "X-Test: hello" --proxy-header "X-Evil: owned"
flotzam•1y ago
Imagine running

  curl --proxy-header "X-Test: $UNTRUSTED_USER_INPUT"
wang_li•1y ago
That is not a bug in curl, at most it's a bug in whatever gathered $UNTRUSTED_USER_INPUT.
flotzam•1y ago
People still expect an API to reject illegal values. Calling the parameter --proxy-header (singular) could lead someone to assume that multiline strings are illegal values, even if there's a note in the docs somewhere saying otherwise.
blueflow•1y ago
Then the people assuming random things without doing research are to blame, not curl.
flotzam•1y ago
Apportioning blame doesn't get rid of bugs; misuse resistant APIs do.
blueflow•1y ago
Reading docs ("research") is essential part of engineering.

Lets ask the question reversed: How did people know in the first place what kind of string they need to give to --proxy-header?

flotzam•1y ago
> Reading docs ("research") is essential part of engineering.

Sure, but so is safety engineering. Making mechanisms more obvious to use correctly or fail safe if used incorrectly improves outcomes when flawed human beings use them. It also makes them more pleasant to use in general.

Besides, look at the man page in question. It's talking about this in terms of encoding niceties and doesn't even spell out the possibility of deliberate, let alone malicious multiline values:

"curl makes sure that each header you add/replace is sent with the proper end-of-line marker, you should thus not add that as a part of the header content: do not add newlines or carriage returns, they only mess things up for you."

That's inducing a wrong/incomplete mental model of how this parameter works.

jeroenhd•1y ago
I suppose it kind of depends. I agree with the curl team here that this is a case of garbage in/garbage out, but I can imagine this going wrong with a binary protocol like HTTP2 on the front and a text protocol like HTTP 1.1 behind a reverse proxy. The \r\n will make it to the proxy as a separate header, but will be turned into two headers on the upstream.

That said, this would be a (reverse) proxy vulnerability, not one in curl.

ale42•1y ago
I'm not sure where is the security issue here. As already noted, one can just put several --proxy-header arguments, so the functionality is equivalent.

The only way this would do something unexpected (and not necessarily dangerous besides breaking the service) would be if the curl command would be used in a scenario like: (1) curl is used by some script to access some API or other URL, (2) a user can configure the script to give a specific value to an header, let's say an authentication token or similar, but the user can't directly alter the curl command (e.g. because they can only change URL and TOKEN with a web interface). Here the user would be able to add an header IF the script is not properly sanitizing the input (so the supposed security issue IMHO would be in the script), but if adding an additional header breaks security, the underlying system has a problem too...

In a very far-stretched scenario, one can possibly add two CRLFs and have the rest of the header (if any) considered by the server as data. IF the request is a POST/PUT/... request, and IF the server returns (or allows later access to) the data, and IF the attacker manipulating the supposedly-restricted single-header can see the output of the call (or retrieve the saved data), then we'd have an information disclosure issue. Would it disclose anything sensitive? Not sure, unless there's an auth token or something AFTER the header. And again, I'd rather incriminate the curl caller for not sanitizing the input if this happens.

blueflow•1y ago
> doesn't even spell out the possibility of deliberate, ... multiline values

It does for me, as any kind of extra newlines results in a multi-line string.

> ... malicious ...

Like Daniel said, garbage in, garbage out. If you pass user inputs to curl, one should check what curl does with these values and take proper care.

robertlagrant•1y ago
> do not add newlines or carriage returns, they only mess things up for you

I disagree, but I would say that curl might as well add this as a validation check than a documentation warning.

blueflow•1y ago
This is explained in the ticket:

  One of the reasons we still allow that is that this "feature" was used quite deliberately by users in the past and I have hesitated to change that for the risk that it will break some users use cases.
robertlagrant•1y ago
Yes, I'm not sure if I agree with this or not. Those users don't have to upgrade. But obviously I'm not maintaining a key tool for the world. It's just my opinion.
soraminazuki•1y ago
One shouldn't construct shell commands from untrusted user input in the first place unless they know exactly what they're doing and is aware of all the pitfalls. It's the worst possible tool to be using if the aim is to avoid security issues with minimal effort. Debating about this particular curl quirk distracts from the bigger issue IMO.
robertlagrant•1y ago
> That is not a bug in curl, at most it's a bug in whatever gathered $UNTRUSTED_USER_INPUT.

But that could just contain the bad header only, could it not?