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Authentication bypass bug in Nextauth.js could allow email account takeover

Vulnerability has been patched in latest versions

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#xss#vulnerability#web#nodejs#js#auth

Vulnerability has been patched in latest versions

A critical authentication bypass flaw in an NPM package could allow a malicious actor to take over a victim’s email account.

The vulnerability, which was rated a CVSS score of 9.1, was present in Nextauth.js, an open source authentication package for next.js applications.

Users of NPM package next-auth who are using the either in versions before 4.10.3 or 3.29.10 are affected by the bug, a security advisory warns.

Read more of the latest web security vulnerability news

If an attacker could forge a request that sent a comma-separated list of emails, for example , to the sign-in endpoint, Nextauth.js would send emails to both the attacker and to the victim’s email addresses.

The attacker could then login as a newly created user with the email being .

Basic authorization such as in the callback would fail to communicate a threat to the developer and would let the attacker bypass authorization, even with an @attacker.com address.

Patched

The vulnerability has been patched by maintainers in v4.10.3 and v3.29.10 by normalizing the email value that is sent to the sign-in endpoint before accessing it anywhere else.

“We also added a callback on the configuration, where you can further tweak your requirements for what your system considers a valid email address,” wrote the maintainers.

A detailed workaround is also available for any users who cannot patch, however updating to the latest version is recommended.

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