In a hacked computer, using Firefox, I see the content-security-policy for chatgpt includes chrome-extension://iaiigpefkbhgjcmcmffmfkpmhemdhdnj Would this extension be installed in the computer?
Below is the content-security-policy Firefox loads for chatGPT:
default-src 'self'; script-src 'self' 'nonce-eec8ce04-1f27-4481-8ed6-b8f877eef280' 'wasm-unsafe-eval' chatgpt.com/ces https://*.chatgpt.com https://*.chatgpt.com/ https://*.oaistatic.com https://api.openai.com https://chat.openai.com https://chatgpt.com/ https://chatgpt.com/backend-anon https://chatgpt.com/backend-api https://chatgpt.com/graphql https://chatgpt.com/public-api https://chatgpt.com/voice https://jidori.g1.internal.services.openai.org https://oaistatic.com https://snc.apps.openai.com https://snc.chatgpt.com/backend/se https://tcr9i.chat.openai.com https://tcr9i.chatgpt.com/ wss://*.chatgpt.com wss://*.chatgpt.com/; script-src-elem 'self' 'nonce-eec8ce04-1f27-4481-8ed6-b8f877eef280' 'sha256-RvbVrdDS11FSnQaULCOgXPA5u0nMP2Im1d2pGiRBGC4=' 'sha256-eMuh8xiwcX72rRYNAGENurQBAcH7kLlAUQcoOri3BIo=' auth0.openai.com challenges.cloudflare.com chatgpt.com/ces https://*.chatgpt.com https://*.chatgpt.com/ https://*.oaistatic.com https://api.openai.com https://apis.google.com https://chat.openai.com https://chatgpt.com/ https://chatgpt.com/backend-anon https://chatgpt.com/backend-api https://chatgpt.com/graphql https://chatgpt.com/public-api https://chatgpt.com/voice https://docs.google.com https://jidori.g1.internal.services.openai.org https://js.live.net/v7.2/OneDrive.js https://oaistatic.com https://snc.apps.openai.com https://snc.chatgpt.com/backend/se https://tcr9i.chat.openai.com https://tcr9i.chatgpt.com/ https://www-onepick-opensocial.googleusercontent.com wss://*.chatgpt.com wss://*.chatgpt.com/; img-src * 'self' blob: data: https: https://docs.google.com https://drive-thirdparty.googleusercontent.com https://ssl.gstatic.com; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' chatgpt.com/ces https://*.chatgpt.com https://*.chatgpt.com/ https://*.oaistatic.com https://api.openai.com https://chat.openai.com https://chatgpt.com/ https://chatgpt.com/backend-anon https://chatgpt.com/backend-api https://chatgpt.com/graphql https://chatgpt.com/public-api https://chatgpt.com/voice https://jidori.g1.internal.services.openai.org https://oaistatic.com https://snc.apps.openai.com https://snc.chatgpt.com/backend/se https://tcr9i.chat.openai.com https://tcr9i.chatgpt.com/ wss://*.chatgpt.com wss://*.chatgpt.com/; font-src 'self' data: https://*.oaistatic.com https://fonts.gstatic.com; connect-src 'self' *.oaiusercontent.com api-iam.intercom.io api-js.mixpanel.com browser-intake-datadoghq.com chatgpt.com/ces fileserviceuploadsperm.blob.core.windows.net http://0.0.0.0:* http://localhost:* https://*.chatgpt.com https://*.chatgpt.com/ https://*.oaistatic.com https://api.onedrive.com https://api.openai.com https://chat.openai.com https://chatgpt.com/ https://chatgpt.com/backend-anon https://chatgpt.com/backend-api https://chatgpt.com/graphql https://chatgpt.com/public-api https://chatgpt.com/voice https://content.googleapis.com https://docs.google.com https://events.statsigapi.net https://featuregates.org https://graph.microsoft.com https://jidori.g1.internal.services.openai.org https://oaistatic.com https://snc.apps.openai.com https://snc.chatgpt.com/backend/se https://tcr9i.chat.openai.com https://tcr9i.chatgpt.com/ https://www.googleapis.com o33249.ingest.sentry.io statsigapi.net wss://*.chatgpt.com wss://*.chatgpt.com/ wss://*.intercom.io wss://*.webpubsub.azure.com; frame-src challenges.cloudflare.com https://*.sharepoint.com https://content.googleapis.com https://docs.google.com https://onedrive.live.com https://tcr9i.chat.openai.com https://tcr9i.chatgpt.com/ js.stripe.com; worker-src 'self' blob:; media-src blob: 'self' *.oaiusercontent.com fileserviceuploadsperm.blob.core.windows.net https://cdn.openai.com https://persistent.oaistatic.com; frame-ancestors chrome-extension://iaiigpefkbhgjcmcmffmfkpmhemdhdnj; report-to chatgpt-csp-new; report-uri https://browser-intake-datadoghq.com/api/v2/logs?dd-api-key=pub1f79f8ac903a5872ae5f53026d20a77c&dd-evp-origin=content-security-policy&ddsource=csp-report&ddtags=version%3Achatgpt-csp-new
Notice that it includes " frame-ancestors chrome-extension://iaiigpefkbhgjcmcmffmfkpmhemdhdnj"
Would this extension be installed in the computer, kind of like the extensions that are loaded from Chrome (i.e., C:\Users\myUser\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\extensions_crx_cache)?
Thanx
Всички отговори (3)
Looks like this is part of how that website works about what frames to allow, so probably nothing to worry about.
cor-el, I accessed the webpage through https://chatgpt.com, not chat.openai.com.
I found your answer to be unhelpful and lacking depth. The content-security-policy (CSP) I mentioned above seems very suspicious, especially the connect-src http://0.0.0.0:* http://localhost:*. This suggests that a middleman might have modified the settings to reduce Firefox's security warnings.
For reference, here is some information from https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Content-Security-Policy/frame-ancestors about the CSP frame-ancestors directive:
The HTTP Content-Security-Policy (CSP) frame-ancestors directive specifies valid parents that may embed a page using `<frame>`, `<iframe>`, `<object>`, or `<embed>`.
Among other, sources can include "scheme-source": A scheme such as http: or https:. The colon is required and the scheme should not be quoted. Data schemes can also be specified (not recommended).
- data: Allows data: URLs to be used as a content source. This is insecure as an attacker can inject arbitrary data: URLs. Use this sparingly and definitely not for scripts.
- mediastream: Allows mediastream: URIs to be used as a content source.
- blob: Allows blob: URIs to be used as a content source.
- filesystem: Allows filesystem: URIs to be used as a content source.
I guess chrome-extension://iaiigpefkbhgjcmcmffmfkpmhemdhdnj is a scheme source. I am still wondering how Firefox would know where to pull the information from this source?
The chrome-extension:// protocol is used for Google Chrome extensions and doesn't apply to Firefox (Firefox uses moz-extension://), so if a website thinks that it needs a special CSP rule then you are better of asking this on a GC oriented forum or switch to another website if you disagree.