Nonfungible token marketplace OpenSea has reportedly patched a vulnerability that, if exploited, could have exposed identifying information about its anonymous users.
In a March 9 blog post blog, cybersecurity firm Imperva detailed how it discovered the vulnerability, which it claimed could deanonymize OpenSea users “by linking an IP address, a browser session, or an email in certain conditions” to an NFT.
As the NFT corresponds to a cryptocurrency wallet address, a user’s real identity could be revealed from the information gathered and linked to the wallet and its activity, Imperva explained.
Imperva Red Team discovered a cross-site search vulnerability affecting the #NFT marketplace #OpenSea.This vulnerability allows for the deanonymization of users, potentially revealing a user's identity. https://t.co/nGQWceeGEc
The exploit is understood to have taken advantage of a cross-site search vulnerability. Imperva claimed OpenSea had misconfigured a library that resizes webpage elements that load HTML content from elsewhere that are typically used to place ads, interactive content, or embedded videos.
As OpenSea didn’t restrict this library’s communications, exploiters could use the information it broadcasts as an “oracle” to narrow down when searches return no results as the webpage would be smaller.
Imperva detailed that an attacker would send their target a link through email or SMS, which if clicked “reveals valuable information, such as the target’s IP address, user agent, device details, and software versions.”
The attacker would then use OpenSea’s vulnerability to extract the NFT names of their target and associate the corresponding wallet address with identifying information such as an email or phone number which was sent
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