this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2024
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It turns out the language you use can be semantically ambiguous or misleading if you phrase it incorrectly. Today you learned.
Oh, did you finally manage to fucking Google how HTMX works so you could fish for more reasons to say it's unsafe? What you're describing is not a particular concern to HTMX. If an attacker can inject HTML into your page (for example, through an XSS vulnerability), they could potentially set up HTMX attributes to make requests to any endpoint, including endpoints designed to collect sensitive information. But, and this is very important, this is not a unique issue to HTMX; it's a general security concern related to XSS vulnerabilities and improper CSP configurations.
Do you know what the correct cure for that is?
PROPER CSP CONFIGURATION.
Do you genuinely not understand that CSP works on the browser API level? It doesn't check to see if your JavaScript contains reference to disallowed endpoints and then prevents it from running. I don't know how you "think" CSP operates, but what happens is this: The browser exposes an API to allow JavaScript to make HTTP requests - specifically XMLHttpRequest and fetch(). What CSP does is tell the browser "Hey, if you get an API request via XMLHttpRequest or fetch to a disallowed endpoint, don't fucking issue it." That's it. HTMX does not magically bypass the underlying CSP mechanism, because those directives operate on a level beyond HTMX's (or any JS library's) influence BY DESIGN. You cannot bypass if it if's properly configured. Two very serious questions: what part of this is confusing to you? And, have you ever tested this yourself in any capacity to even see if what you're claiming is even true? Because I have tested it and CSP will block ANY HTMX issued request that is not allowed by CSP's connect-src directive, assuming that's set.