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Entra Agent ID from a Security Perspective
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/r/netsec - Information Security News & Discussion
- X.com silently injects session-bound tracking tokens into your clipboard on every copy โ security tools correctly flag this as malicious injection
X.com silently injects session-bound tracking tokens into your clipboard on every copy โ security tools correctly flag this as malicious injection
Did some digging into why pasting from X.com triggers "malicious injection" warnings in security tools (CrowdStrike, Defender, SentinelOne). Turns out it's not a false positive.
Every time you copy text or a link from X.com, their JavaScript intercepts the `copy` event and rewrites your clipboard before it lands. Three injection vectors:
**URL tracking** โ clean tweet links get `?s=12&t=<base64-token>` appended. The token is session-bound and uniquely identifies you.
**HTML clipboard payload** โ X writes `text/html` alongside `text/plain`. The HTML contains hidden `<span>` elements with base64-encoded tracking data. This is what trips the XSS detection rules.
**Cross-context deanonymization** โ paste a tweet link into email, a forum, or Slack, and X can correlate the copier's identity with the paste destination. Shadow social graph construction without consent.
The `t=` parameter is the smoking gun. It's a base64-encoded binary blob that persists across your session. Security scanners see "base64 blob injected into clipboard" and flag it โ same behavior as information-stealing malware, because technically it's the same mechanism.
No opt-out. No disclosure. The bug bounty program was dissolved.
Full technical writeup with detection regex and DevTools monitoring code:
[link] [comments]
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