Wikipedia in read-only mode following mass admin account compromise

(wikimediastatus.net)

615 points | by greyface- 3 hours ago

37 comments

  • tux3 1 hour ago
    See the public phab ticket: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T419143

    In short, a Wikimedia Foundation account was doing some sort of test which involved loading a large number of user scripts. They decided to just start loading random user scripts, instead of creating some just for this test.

    The user who ran this test is a Staff Security Engineer at WMF, and naturally they decided to do this test under their highly-privileged Wikimedia Foundation staff account, which has permissions to edit the global CSS and JS that runs on every page.

    One of those random scripts was a 2 year old malicious script from ruwiki. This script injects itself in the global Javascript on every page, and then in the userscripts of any user that runs into it, so it started spreading and doing damage really fast. This triggered tons of alerts, until the decision was made to turn the Wiki read-only.

    • londons_explore 1 hour ago
      Didn't realise this was some historic evil script and not some active attacker who could change tack at any moment.

      That makes the fix pretty easy. Write a regex to detect the evil script, and revert every page to a historic version without the script.

      • jacquesm 36 minutes ago
        True but it does say something that such a script was able to lie dormant for so long.
  • nhubbard 2 hours ago
    Wow. This worm is fascinating. It seems to do the following:

    - Inject itself into the MediaWiki:Common.js page to persist globally, and into the User:Common.js page to do the same as a fallback

    - Uses jQuery to hide UI elements that would reveal the infection

    - Vandalizes 20 random articles with a 5000px wide image and another XSS script from basemetrika.ru

    - If an admin is infected, it will use the Special:Nuke page to delete 3 random articles from the global namespace, AND use the Special:Random with action=delete to delete another 20 random articles

    EDIT! The Special:Nuke is really weird. It gets a default list of articles to nuke from the search field, which could be any group of articles, and rubber-stamps nuking them. It does this three times in a row.

    • 256_ 2 hours ago
      As someone on the Wikipediocracy forums pointed out, basemetrika.ru does not exist. I get an NXDomain response trying to resolve it. The plot thickens.
      • pKropotkin 2 hours ago
        Yeah, basemetrika.ru is free now. Should we occupy it? ;)
        • acheong08 1 hour ago
          I registered it about 40 minutes ago, but it seems the DNS has been cached by everyone as a result of the wikipedia hack & not even the NS is propagating. Can't get an SSL certificate .
          • bjord 15 minutes ago
            nice work
          • Imustaskforhelp 58 minutes ago
            I had looked into its availability too just out of curiosity itself before reading your comment on a provider, Then I read your comment. Atleast its taken in from the hackernews community and not a malicious actor.

            Do keep us updated on the whole situation if any relevant situation can happen from your POV perhaps.

            I'd suggest to give the domain to wikipedia team as they might know what could be the best use case of it if possible.

        • amiga386 2 hours ago
          It means giving money to the Russian government, so no.

          If anyone from the Russian government is reading this, get the fuck out of Ukraine. Thank you.

          • dwedge 1 hour ago
            Well done, it's finally over
          • INR18650 1 hour ago
            reg.ru, the most popular registrar, sells .ru domains for $1.65, very little of which goes to the national registry. What is their profit on this domain, a couple of cents?

            You have helped to bring peace by approximately zero nanoseconds, while doing absolutely nothing about western countries still buying massive amounts of natural resources from Putin. Tax income on their exports make the primary source of income for the federal budget, which directly funds the military.

            Good virtue signaling, though. I'm completely disillusioned with the West, this is nothing new.

          • cryptoegorophy 1 hour ago
            Did you know… ukraine still lets Russian gas transit through ukraine territory? Making ukraine the largest sponsor of terrorism against ukraine? Did you know, when war started it, ukraine was letting Russia make around $1 billion PER DAY for like a year before reducing that amount ? You didn’t know that. But hey, protesting by not letting some one buy .ru will certainly do damage to Putin!
            • Rendello 8 minutes ago
              If anyone is genuinely curious about this, they were indeed letting Russian gas through and stopped in 2025:

              > On 1 January 2025, Ukraine terminated all Russian gas transit through its territory, after the contract between Gazprom and Naftohaz signed in 2019 expired. [...] It is estimated that Russia will lose around €5bn a year as a result.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia%E2%80%93Ukraine_gas_dis...

            • yenepho 1 hour ago
              You must be fun at parties
              • bregma 35 minutes ago
                They're a ... gas.
              • DaSHacka 58 minutes ago
                More fun than GP lol
        • Barbing 2 hours ago
          Namecheap won’t sell it which is great because it made me pause and wonder whether it's legal for an American to send Russians money for a TLD.
          • DaSHacka 57 minutes ago
            Pretty sure it is, however, the reverse is actually illegal (for US citizens to provide professional services to anyone residing in Russia) as of like 2022-ish
        • 256_ 2 hours ago
          I'm half-tempted to try and claim it myself for fun and profit, but I think I'll leave it for someone else.

          What should we put there, anyway?

    • bawolff 2 hours ago
      > Vandalizes 20 random articles with a 5000px wide image and another XSS script from basemetrika.ru

      Note while this looks like its trying to trigger an xss, what its doing is ineffective, so basemetrika.ru would never get loaded (even ignoring that the domain doesnt exist)

    • dheera 2 hours ago
      Wouldn't be surprised if elaborate worms like this are AI-designed
      • nhubbard 2 hours ago
        I wouldn't be surprised either. But the original formatting of the worm makes me think it was human written, or maybe AI assisted, but not 100% AI. It has a lot of unusual stylistic choices that I don't believe an AI would intentionally output.
      • integralid 2 hours ago
        I would. AI designed software in general does not include novel ideas. And this is the kind of novel software AI is not great at, because there's not much training data.

        Of course it's very possible someone wrote it with AI help. But almost no chance it was designed by AI.

  • Kiboneu 2 hours ago
    > Cleaning this up is going to be an absolute forensic nightmare for the Wikimedia team since the database history itself is the active distribution vector.

    Well, worm didn't get root -- so if wikimedia snapshots or made a recent backup, probably not so much of a nightmare? Then the diffs can tell a fairly detailed forensic story, including indicators of motive.

    Snapshotting is a very low-overhead operation, so you can make them very frequently and then expire them after some time.

    • Extropy_ 1 hour ago
      Even if they reset to several days ago and lose, say, thousands of edits, even tens of thousands of minor edits, they're still in a pretty good place. Losing a few days of edits is less-than-ideal but very tolerable for Wikipedia as a whole
      • tetha 1 hour ago
        At $work we're hosting business knowledge databases. Interestingly enough, if you need to revert a day or two of edits, you're better off to do it asap, over postponing and mulling over it. Especially if you can keep a dump or an export around.

        People usually remember what they changed yesterday and have uploaded files and such still around. It's not great, but quite possible. Maybe you need to pull a few content articles out from the broken state if they ask. No huge deal.

        If you decide to roll back after a week or so, editors get really annoyed, because now they are usually forced to backtrack and reconcile the state of the knowledge base, maybe you need a current and a rolled-back system, it may have regulatory implications and it's a huge pain in the neck.

      • Kiboneu 1 hour ago
        Nah, you can snapshot every 15 minutes. The snapshot interval depends on the frequency of changes and their capacity, but it's up to them how to allocate these capacities... but it's definitely doable and there are real reasons for doing so. You can collapse deltas between snapshots after some time to make them last longer. I'd be surprised if they don't do that.

        As an aside, snapshotting would have prevented a good deal of horror stories shared by people who give AI access to the FS. Well, as long as you don't give it root.......

        • john_strinlai 1 hour ago
          >Nah, you can snapshot every 15 minutes.

          obviously you can. but, what is the actual snapshot frequency? like, what is the timestamp of the last known good snapshot? that is what matters.

          in any case, the comment you are replying to is a hypothetical, which correctly points out that even a day or two of lost edits is fine (not ideal, but fine). your reply doesnt engage with their comment at all.

          • Kiboneu 1 hour ago
            > the comment you are replying to is a hypothetical, which correctly points out that even a day or two of lost edits is fine (not ideal, but fine). your reply doesnt engage with their comment at all.

            I did engage, by pointing out that it wasn't relevant nor a realistic scenario for a competent sysadmin. (Did you read the OP?) That's a /you/ problem if you rely on infrequent backups, especially for a service with so much flux.

            > what is the actual snapshot frequency? like, what is the timestamp of the last known good snapshot?

            ? Why would I know what their internal operations are?

            • john_strinlai 1 hour ago
              >I did engage, by pointing out that it wasn't relevant nor a realistic scenario for a competent sysadmin.

              >Why would I know what their internal operations are?

              i mean... you must, right? you know that once-a-day snapshots is not relevant to this specific incident. you know that their sysadmins are apparently competent. i just assumed you must have some sort of insider information to be so confident.

              • Kiboneu 1 hour ago
                I think you are misreading my comments and made a bad assumption. The reason I'm confident is because this has been my bread and butter for a decade.
                • john_strinlai 1 hour ago
                  >The reason I'm confident is because this has been my bread and butter for a decade.

                  my decade of dealing with incompetent sysadmins and broken backups (if they even exist) has given me the opposite of confidence.

                  but im glad you have had a different experience

                  • Kiboneu 35 minutes ago
                    > my decade of dealing with incompetent sysadmins and broken backups (if they even exist) has given me the opposite of confidence.

                    Oh, I agree that the average bar is low. That's part of the reason I do it all myself.

                    The heuristic with wikimedia is that they've been running a PHP service that accepts and stores (anonymous) input for 25 years. The longetivity with the risk exposure that they have are indicators that they know what they are doing, and I'm sure they've learned from recovering all sorts of failures over the years.

                    Look at how quickly it was brought back up in this instance!

                    So, yeah. I don't think initial hypothetical counterpoint holds water, and that's what I have been pointing out.

        • sobjornstad 1 hour ago
          Nowadays I refuse to do any serious work that isn't in source control anywhere besides my NAS that takes copy-on-write snapshots every 15 minutes. It has saved my butt more times than I can count.
          • Kiboneu 1 hour ago
            Yeah same here. Earlier I had a sync error that corrupted my .git, somehow. no problem; I go back 15 minutes and copy the working version.

            Feels good to pat oneself in the back. Mine is sore, though. My E&O/cyber insurance likes me.

        • gchamonlive 1 hour ago
          The problem isn't the granularity of the backup but since the worm silently nukes pages, it's virtually impossible to reconcile the state before the attack and the current state, so you have to just forfeit any changes made since then and ask the contributors to do the leg work of reapplying the correct changes
          • Kiboneu 1 hour ago
            Why would nuked pages matter? Snapshots capture everything and are not part of wikimedia software.
  • wikiperson26 2 hours ago
    A theory on phab: "Some investigation was made in Russian Wikipedia discord chat, maybe it will be useful.

    1. In 2023, vandal attacks was made against two Russian-language alternative wiki projects, Wikireality and Cyclopedia. Here https://wikireality.ru/wiki/РАОрг is an article about organisators of these attacks.

    2. In 2024, ruwiki user Ololoshka562 created a page https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/user:Ololoshka562/test.js containing script used in these attacks. It was inactive next 1.5 years.

    3. Today, sbassett massively loaded other users' scripts into his global.js on meta, maybe for testing global API limits: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/SBasse... . In one edit, he loaded Ololoshka's script: https://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=30167... and run it."

    • orbital-decay 1 hour ago
      I remember someone mass-defacing the ruwiki almost exactly a year ago (March 3 2025) with some immature insults towards certain ruwiki admins. If I'm not mistaken it was a similar method.
  • infinitewars 1 hour ago
    A comment from my wiki-editor friend:

      "The incident appears to have been a cross-site scripting hack. The origin of rhe malicious scripts was a userpage on the Russian Wikipedia. The script contained Russian language text.
    
      During the shutdown, users monitoring [https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/special:RecentChanges Recent changes page on Meta] could view WMF operators manually reverting what appeared to be a worm propagated in common.js
    
      Hopefully this means they won't have to do a database rollback, i.e. no lost edits. "
    
    Interesting to note how trivial it is today to fake something as coming "from the Russians".
  • varun_ch 3 hours ago
    Woah this looks like an old school XSS worm https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:RecentChanges?hidebo...

    I’ve always thought the fact that MediaWiki sometimes lets editors embed JavaScript could be dangerous.

    • varun_ch 3 hours ago
      Also, I’m also surprised an XSS attack like hasn’t yet been actually used to harvest credentials like passwords through browser autofill[0].

      It seems like the worm code/the replicated code only really attacks stuff on site. But leaking credentials (and obviously people reuse passwords across sites) could be sooo much worse.

      [0] https://varun.ch/posts/autofill/

      • stephbook 2 hours ago
        Chrome doesnt actually autofill before you interact. It only displays what it would fill in at the same location visually.
        • varun_ch 2 hours ago
          but any interaction is good for Chrome, like dismissing a cookie banner
      • af78 2 hours ago
        Time to add 2FA...
  • greyface- 3 hours ago
  • Wikipedianon 2 hours ago
    This was only a matter of time.

    The Wikipedia community takes a cavalier attitude towards security. Any user with "interface administrator" status can change global JavaScript or CSS for all users on a given Wiki with no review. They added mandatory 2FA only a few years ago...

    Prior to this, any admin had that ability until it was taken away due to English Wikipedia admins reverting Wikimedia changes to site presentation (Mediaviewer).

    But that's not all. Most "power users" and admins install "user scripts", which are unsandboxed JavaScript/CSS gadgets that can completely change the operation of the site. Those user scripts are often maintained by long abandoned user accounts with no 2 factor authentication.

    Based on the fact user scripts are globally disabled now I'm guessing this was a vector.

    The Wikimedia foundation knows this is a security nightmare. I've certainly complained about this when I was an editor.

    But most editors that use the website are not professional developers and view attempts to lock down scripting as a power grab by the Wikimedia Foundation.

    • _verandaguy 4 minutes ago

          > Based on the fact user scripts are globally disabled now I'm guessing this was a vector.
      
      Disabled at which level?

      Browsers still allow for user scripts via tools like TamperMonkey and GreaseMonkey, and that's not enforceable (and arguably, not even trivially visible) to sites, including Wikipedia.

      As I say that out loud, I figure there's a separate ecosystem of Wikipedia-specific user scripts, but arguably the same problem exists.

    • 256_ 2 hours ago
      Maybe somewhat unrelated, but I'm reminded of the fact that people have deleted the main page on a few occasions: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Don%27t_delete_the_m...
    • RGamma 39 minutes ago
      Seems like a good time to donate one's resources to fix it. The internet is super hostile these days. If Wikipedia falls... well...
      • PsylentKnight 20 minutes ago
        My understanding is that Wikipedia receives more donations than they need, surely they have the resources to fix it themselves?
        • noosphr 13 minutes ago
          You would first need to realzie its a problem.
      • logophobia 16 minutes ago
        Sounds more like a political issue this. Can't buy your way out of that.
    • chris_wot 2 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • alphager 1 hour ago
        Most admins on Wikipedia are competent in areas outside of webdev and security.
      • formerly_proven 47 minutes ago
        Wikipedia admins are not IT admins, they're more like forum moderators or admins on a free phpBB 2 hosting service in 2005. They don't have "admin" access to backend systems. Those are the WMF sysadmins.
  • mafriese 1 hour ago
    I’m not saying that this is related to Wikipedia ditching archive.is but timing in combination with Russian messages is at least…weird.
  • lifeisstillgood 2 hours ago
    I completely understand marking the software that controls drinking water as critical infrastructure- but at some point a state based cyber attack that just wipes wikipedia off the net is deeply damaging to our modern society’s ability to agree on common facts …

    Just now thought “if Wikipedia vanished what would it mean … and it’s not on the level of safe drinking water, but it is a level.

    • GuB-42 1 hour ago
      > if Wikipedia vanished what would it mean …

      That someone would need to restore some backups, and in the meantime, use mirrors.

      Seriously, not that big of a deal. I don't know how many copies of Wikipedia are lying around but considering that archives are free to download, I guess a lot. And if you count text-only versions of the English Wikipedia without history and talk pages, it is literally everywhere as it is a common dataset for natural language processing tasks. It is likely to be the most resilient piece of data of that scale in existence today.

      The only difficulty in the worst case scenario would be rebuilding a new central location and restarting the machinery with trusted admins, editors, etc... Any of the tech giants could probably make a Wikipedia replacement in days, with all data restored, but it won't be Wikipedia.

    • xandrius 6 minutes ago
      Don't worry, I personally have an offline backup of the English on my phone.
    • tempaccount5050 1 hour ago
      What you're suggesting is literally impossible. There are plenty of mirrors and random people that download the thing in its entirety. The entire planet would have to be nuked for that to be possible.
    • __turbobrew__ 1 hour ago
      You can download the entirety of wikipedia and store it in your own offline immutable backup.
      • mrguyorama 22 minutes ago
        The dump of english wikipedia is 26gb compressed and completely usable with that compressed format plus a small index file.

        That's small enough to live on most people's phones. It's small enough to be a single BluRay. Maybe Wikipedia should fund some mass printings.

        What you do not get however is any media. No sounds, images, videos, drawings, examples, 3D artifacts, etc etc etc. This is a huge loss on many many many topics.

    • Aperocky 2 hours ago
      All persistent data should have backup.

      It's not a high bar.

    • lyu07282 2 hours ago
      There are so many mirrors anyway and trivial to get a local copy? What is much more concerning is government censorship and age verification/digital id laws where what articles you read becomes part of your government record the police sees when they pull you over.
    • CaptainNegative 1 hour ago
      > but at some point a state based cyber attack that just wipes wikipedia off the net is deeply damaging to our modern society’s ability to agree on common facts

      Haven't we hit that point already with bad faith (and potentially government-run) coordinated editing and voting campaigns, as both Wales and Sanger have been pointing out for a while now?

      See, for example,

      * Sanger: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Larry_Sanger/Nine_Theses

      * Wales: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Gaza_genocide/Archive_22#...

      * PirateWires: https://www.piratewires.com/p/how-wikipedia-is-becoming-a-ma...

    • streetfighter64 1 hour ago
      If you're using wikipedia to "agree on common facts" I think you might have bigger problems...
      • hnfong 1 hour ago
        Not the GP, and I don't believe in the existence of "common facts" in general, but Wikipedia is indeed a good place to figure out what other people might agree as common facts...
    • CSMastermind 40 minutes ago
  • pixl97 2 hours ago
    >Cleaning this up

    Find the first instance and reset to the backup before then. An hour, a day, a week? Doesn't matter that much in this case.

    • bbor 2 hours ago
      It is true that they have a particularly robust, distributed backup system that can/has come in handy, but FWIW the timing matters to them. English Wikipedia receives ~2 edits per second, or 172,800 per day. Many of them are surely minor and/or automated, but still: 1,036,800 lost edits is a lot!
      • Kiboneu 1 hour ago
        Filesystem & database snapshots are very cheap to make, you can make them every 15 minutes. You can expire old snapshots (or collapse the deltas between them) depending on the storage requirements.
        • squeaky-clean 37 minutes ago
          That doesn't really matter though against an attack that takes some time to spread. If the attack was active for let's say, 6 hours, then 43,000 legitimate edits happened in between the last "clean" snapshot and the discovery of the attack. If you just revert to the last clean snapshot you lose those legitimate edits.
      • shevy-java 1 hour ago
        Are they really lost though? I think they should not be lost; they could be stored in a separate database additionally.
        • derefr 1 hour ago
          In fact, as long as the malware is just doing deletes, you can just merge the two "timelines" by restoring the snapshot and then replaying all the edits but ignoring the deletes. Lost deletes really aren't much of a problem!
  • Dwedit 1 hour ago
    I just checked a wiki, and the "MediaWiki:Common.js" page there was read-only, even for wikisysop users.
  • shevy-java 1 hour ago
    This is unfortunate that Wikipedia is under attack. It seems as if there are more malicious actors now than, say, 5 years ago.

    This may be unrelated but I also noticed more attacks on e. g. libgen, Anna's archive and what not. I am not at all saying this is similar to Wikipedia as such, mind you, but it really seems as if there are more actors active now who target people's freedom now (e. g. freedom of choice of access to any kind of information; age restriction aka age "verification" taps into this too).

  • dlcarrier 1 hour ago
    I've never understood why client-side execution is so heavy in modern web pages. Theoretically, the costs to execute it are marginal, but in practice, if I'm browsing a web page from a battery-powered device, all that compute power draining the battery not only affects how long I can use the device between charges, but is also adding wear to the battery, so I'll have to replace it sooner. Also, a lot of web pages are downright slow, because my phone can only perform 10s of billions of operations per second, which isn't enough to responsively arrange text and images (which are composited by dedicated hardware acceleration) through all of the client-side bloat on many modern web pages. If there was that much bloat on the server side, the web server would run out of resources with even moderate usage.

    There's also a lot of client-side authentication, even with financial transactions, e.g. with iOS and Android locally verifying a users password, or worse yet a PIN or biographic information, then sending approval to the server. Granted, authentication of any kind is optional for credit card transactions in the US, so all the rest is security theater, but if it did matter, it would be the worst way to do it.

  • tantalor 3 hours ago
    Nice to see jQuery still getting used :)
  • clcaev 1 hour ago
    We should be using federated organizational architectures when appropriate.

    For Wikipedia, consider a central read-only aggregated mirror that delegates the editorial function to specialized communities. Common, suggested tooling (software and processes) could be maintained centrally but each community might be improved with more independence. This separation of concerns may be a better fit for knowledge collection and archival.

    Note: I edited to stress central mirroring of static content with delegation of editorial function to contributing organizations. I'm expressly not endorsing technical "dynamic" federation approaches.

    • brcmthrowaway 1 hour ago
      Exactly. Wikipedia should be used on ipfs
  • sciencejerk 1 hour ago
    I wonder if any poisoned data made it into LLM training data pipelines?
    • ibejoeb 1 hour ago
      Interesting angle. Everyone has already pointed out that there are backups basically everywhere, and from an information standpoint, shaving off a day (or whatever) of edits just to get to a known-good point is effectively zero cost. But I wonder what the cost is of the potentially bad data getting baked into those models, and if anyone really cares enough to scrap it.
  • devmor 2 hours ago
    In the early 2010’s I worked for a company whose primary income was subscriptions to site protection services - one of which included cleaning up malware-infected Wordpress installations. I worked on the team that did this job.

    This exact type of database-stored executable javascript was one of the most annoying types of infections to clean up.

    • 0xWTF 2 hours ago
      Ok, so there are tons of mediawiki installations all over the internet. What do these operators do? Set their wikis to read-only mode, hang tight, and wait for a security patch?

      Also, does this worm have a name?

      • bawolff 2 hours ago
        There is nothing to do, the incident was not caused by a vulnerability in mediawiki.

        Basically someone who had permissions to alter site js, accidentally added malicious js. The main solution is to be very careful about giving user accounts permission to edit js.

        [There are of course other hardening things that maybe should be done based on lessons learned]

        • streetfighter64 2 hours ago
          Well, admins (or anybody other than the developers / deployment pipeline) having permissions to alter the JS sounds like a significant vulnerability. Maybe it wasn't in the early 2000s, but unencrypted HTTP was also normal then.
          • LaGrange 1 hour ago
            > Well, admins (or anybody other than the developers / deployment pipeline) having permissions to alter the JS sounds like a significant vulnerability.

            It's a common feature of CMS'es and "tag management systems." Its presence is a massive PITA to developers even _besides_ the security, but PMs _love them_, in my experience.

        • dboreham 1 hour ago
          There are already tools and techniques to validate served JS is as-intended, and these techniques could be beefed up by adding browser checks. I've been surprised these haven't been widely adopted given the spate of recent JS-poisoning attacks.
  • lynx97 28 minutes ago
    Time to spend some of this excess money on a bit of security tightening? I hear we're talking about a 9 digit figure.
  • j45 2 hours ago
    Too much app logic in the client side (Javascript) has always been an attack vector. The more that can reasonably be server side, the more that can't be seen.
    • dns_snek 2 hours ago
      The amount of javascript is really beside the point here. The problem is that privileged users can easily edit the code without strong 2FA, allowing automatic propagation.
      • j45 12 minutes ago
        It's not, application logic exposed on the client side is always an attack vector for figuring out how it works and how attack vectors could be devised.

        It's simply a calculated risk.

        How much business and application logic you put in your Javascript is critical.

        On your second unrelated comment about Wikipedia needing to use 2FA, there's probably a better way to do it and I hope mediawiki can do it.

      • shevy-java 1 hour ago
        How does 2FA prevent this here?
        • dns_snek 1 hour ago
          If they required 2FA every time you wanted to modify JS then it couldn't propagate automatically. Just requiring 2FA when you first log in wouldn't help, of course.
          • j45 10 minutes ago
            2FAs also may require a level of KYC that Wikipedia isn't after and advocating for 2FA might indirectly advocate for a lot more things than just 2FA.
  • 0xWTF 2 hours ago
    Looking forward to the postmortem...
  • Kiboneu 2 hours ago
    GOD am I thankful to my old self for disabling js by default. And sticking with it.

    edit: lol downvoted with no counterpoint, is it hitting a nerve?

    • Imustaskforhelp 43 minutes ago
      > edit: lol downvoted with no counterpoint, is it hitting a nerve?

      I have upvoted ya fwiw and I don't understand it either why people would try to downvote ya.

      I mean, if websites work for you while disabling js and you are fine with it. Then I mean JS is an threat vector somewhat.

      Many of us are unable to live our lives without JS. I used to use librewolf and complete and total privacy started feeling a little too uncomfortable

      Now I am on zen-browser fwiw which I do think has some improvements over stock firefox in terms of privacy but I can't say this for sure but I mainly use zen because it looks really good and I just love zen.

      • Kiboneu 0 minutes ago
        > I mean, if websites work for you while disabling js and you are fine with it. Then I mean JS is an threat vector somewhat

        It's also been torture, I definitely don't prescribe it. :P

        And yes, unfortunately I have to enable JS for some sites -- the default is to leave it disabled. And of course with cloudflare I have to whitelist it specifically for their domains (well, the non analytics domains). But thankfully wikipedia is light and spiffy without the javascript.

  • TZubiri 1 hour ago
    There's thousands of copies of the whole wikipedia in sql form though, IIRC it's just like 47GB.
    • eblume 5 minutes ago
      Correct. Not sure about a sql archive, but the kiwix ZIM archive of the top 1M English articles including (downsized but not minimized) images is 43GiB: https://download.kiwix.org/zim/wikipedia/

      And the entire English wikipedia with no images is, interestingly, also 43GiB.

  • garbagecreator 2 hours ago
    Another reason to make the default disabling JS on all websites, and the website should offer a service without JS, especially those implemented in obsolete garbage tech. If it's not an XSS from a famous website, it will be an exploit from a sketchy website.
  • nixass 2 hours ago
    I can edit it
  • j45 2 hours ago
    It's reassuring to know Wikipedia has these kinds of security mechanisms in place.
  • tantalor 3 hours ago
    "Закрываем проект" is Russian for "Closing the project"
  • epicprogrammer 2 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • marginalia_nu 1 hour ago
      > [...] is incredibly insidious. It really exposes the foundational danger of [...]

      My LLM sense is tingling.

      • sefrost 58 minutes ago
        Yeah, it's like the really high-energy way it's written or something? Can't quite put my finger on it.
    • quantum_magpie 2 hours ago
      Could you point to where you found the details of the exploit? It’s not in the linked page. Really interested. Especially the part about modifying it and the other users propagating it?
      • homebrewer 1 hour ago
        The fact of this obvious LLM slop being at the top of this discussion is incredibly insidious. The "facts" it mentions are made up. Has this vapid style finally become so normalized that nobody is seeing it anymore?
        • 256_ 1 hour ago
          I didn't even notice it until you pointed it out, but I checked that account's comment history and it uses em dashes. Also, "the database history itself is the active distribution vector" Is just semantic nonsense.

          I still have a basic assumption that if something I'm reading doesn't make much sense to me, I probably just don't understand it. Over the last few years I've had to get used to the new assumption that it's because I'm reading LLM output.

          • homebrewer 1 hour ago
            I've also always used em-dashes, it's not a very reliable indicator. That style is a dead giveaway, though. Some of its comments seem to be written by a human, but several definitely aren't.

            I've been spending less and less time here, the moderation is obviously overwhelmed and is losing the battle.

            https://aphyr.com/posts/389-the-future-of-forums-is-lies-i-g...

            • jddj 38 minutes ago
              The dead internet arrived slowly, then all at once
        • JKCalhoun 1 hour ago
          Perhaps we're at last watching the internet die.
          • NoMoreNicksLeft 1 hour ago
            Yes, but we did that over the last 15 years. We just never realized that's what we were seeing.

            It only clicked for me a few weeks ago, in one thread or another here when I realized that no one could ever do what Google did once: Cloudflare and other antibot technologies have closed off traditional search-as-the-result-of-web-crawling permanently. It's not that no one will do it because they think there's no money in it, or that no one will do it because the upfront costs are gigantic... literally it can no longer be done.

            The internet died.

            • Imustaskforhelp 1 hour ago
              There are still a few options. I recently had the idea of doing search engine queries on 9 search engines.

              Mojeek is a good independent search browser, it isn't the best but at that Hackernews comment/analysis I was doing I found it to be the only one which worked for that case.

              Brave exists too.

              I know the situation is very critical/dire tho but there is still some chance. All be it quite small.

              Mojeek IIRC, is operated by one single guy for 15 years.

        • infinitewars 1 hour ago
          That user, epicprogrammer's comment history suggests alignment with the Musk/Thiel/Anduril/DoW/anti-Anthropic crowd who are incessantly trying to damage Wikipedia's reputation to push a "Grokipedia" where they can define the narrative.

          I wouldn't be surprised if that group were the origin of this attack too.

  • 256_ 3 hours ago
    Here before someone says that it's because MediaWiki is written in PHP.
    • Dwedit 3 hours ago
      PHP is the language where "return flase" causes it to return true.

      https://danielc7.medium.com/remote-code-execution-gaining-do...

      • m4tthumphrey 2 hours ago
        Also the language that runs half of the web.

        Also the language that has made me millions over my career with no degree.

        Also the language that allows people to be up and running in seconds (with or without AI).

        I could go on.

        • dspillett 2 hours ago
          > Also the language that has made me millions over my career with no degree.

          Well done.

          > Also the language that allows people to be up and running in seconds (with or without AI).

          People getting up and running without any opportunity to be taught about security concerns (even those as simple as the risks of inadequate input verification), especially considering the infamous inconsistency in PHP's APIs which can lead to significant foot-guns, is both a blessing and a curse… Essentially a pre-cursor to some of the crap that is starting to be published now via vibe-coding with little understanding.

        • jjice 2 hours ago
          PHP is a fine language. It started my career. That said, it has a lot of baggage that can let you shoot yourself in the foot. Modern PHP is pretty awesome though.
          • radium3d 2 hours ago
            Pretty sure we've seen people coding in essentially every other programming language also shoot themselves in the foot.
            • Sohcahtoa82 1 hour ago
              Every language has foot-guns of some sort. The difference is how easy it is to accidentally pull the trigger.

              PHP makes it easy.

            • jjice 39 minutes ago
              Yeah of course PHP isn't the only programming language you can write bugs in. I don't think you can make it impossible to shoot yourself in the foot, but PHP gives you more opportunities than some other languages, especially with older PHP standard library functions.

              One thing I particularly hate is when functions require calling another function afterwards to get any errors that happened, like `json_decode`. C has that problem too.

              Problems don't make it a _bad_ programming language. All languages have problems. PHP just has more than some other languages.

        • ramon156 2 hours ago
          The language is not what makes you nor the product. You could've written the same thing in RoR, PHP was just first and it's why it still exists
          • stackghost 2 hours ago
            PHP performance is significantly better than Ruby on Rails, which I think plays a part in its continued popularity.
        • onion2k 2 hours ago
          Also the language that runs half of the web.

          The bottom half.

          ;)

        • ChrisMarshallNY 2 hours ago
          I use it on the backends of my stuff.

          Works great, but, like any tool, usage matters.

          People who use tools badly, get bad results.

          I've always found the "Fishtank Graph" to be relevant: https://w3techs.com/technologies/history_overview/programmin...

          • mannykannot 1 hour ago
            People who use tools badly inflict bad results on other people, quite often far more so than they do so on themselves.
        • cwillu 2 hours ago
          Try not to take criticisms of tools personally. Phillips head screws are shit for a great many applications, while simultaneously being involved in billions of dollars of economic activity, and being a driver that everyone has available.
        • theamk 2 hours ago
          Yep, that's the sad truth - a language popularity often has nothing to do with it's security properties. People will happily keep churning out insecure junk as long as it makes them millions, botnet and data compromises be damned.
        • radium3d 2 hours ago
          PHP is insanely great, and very fast. The hate has no clout.
        • m4tthumphrey 33 minutes ago
          I can't edit nor be bothered to reply to all of the negative responses so I'll put it here.

          Pretty much all of you missed the larger point. PHP was what allowed me to not work in retail forever, buy a forever house, never have to worry about losing my job (this may change in the future with AI) or being at risk for redundancy, having chosen to only work for small, "normal" well run profitable businesses.

          Unless you're building a hyper scale product, it does the job perfectly. PHP itself is not a security issue; using it poorly is, and any language can be used poorly. PHP is still perfectly suitable for web dev, especially in 2026.

        • jasonjayr 2 hours ago
          Perl still runs the other half?
      • 420official 2 hours ago
        FWIW this was fixed in 2020
        • dspillett 2 hours ago
          I've not used PHP in anger in well over a decade, but if the general environment out there is anything like it was back then there are likely a lot of people, mostly on cheap shared hosting arrangements, running PHP versions older than that and for the most part knowing no better.

          That isn't the fault of the language of course, but a valid reason for some of the “ick” reaction some get when it is mentioned.

          • Joel_Mckay 24 minutes ago
            PHP had its issues like every language, but also a minimal memory footprint, XML/SOAP parser, and several SQL database cursor options.

            Most modern web languages like nodejs are far worse due to dependency rot, and poor REST design pattern implementations. =3

      • ale42 2 hours ago
        Except that in a contemporary PHP that doesn't work any more.

          PHP Warning:  Uncaught Error: Undefined constant "flase" in php shell code:1
        
        This means game over, the script stops there.
  • meetpaleltech 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • pKropotkin 2 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • softskunk 2 hours ago
      care to elaborate?
      • yomismoaqui 2 hours ago
        If I had to guess it's the typical "people with power behaving like dicks".
        • pKropotkin 2 hours ago
          Absolutely. We know plenty of examples where these arseholes trash genuinely valuable contributions from volunteers just on a whim.
  • noobahoi 1 hour ago
    [flagged]
  • yabones 3 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • gadders 3 hours ago
      "The Wikimedia Foundation, which operates Wikipedia, reported a total revenue of $185.4 million for the 2023–2024 fiscal year (ending June 2024). The majority of this funding comes from individual donations, with additional income from investments and the Wikimedia Enterprise commercial API service."

      (Unless this was satire and I missed it)

      • josefresco 2 hours ago
        What's the operating budget for other websites with comparable traffic? Without context $185 million seems like a lot, but compared to what? Reddit's operating budget for the same timeframe was $1.86 billion.
        • gadders 2 hours ago
          I agree, but it's not a shoestring budget. They also seem to run a surplus every year:

          The Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) maintains a significant financial surplus and a growing, healthy balance sheet, with net assets reaching approximately $271.5 million in the 2023–2024 fiscal year. This surplus is largely driven by consistent, high-volume, small-dollar donations, with total annual revenue often exceeding $180 million.

          • josefresco 2 hours ago
            Surplus is a good thing right? Long term stability, responsible financial management, healthy margins? If they said one year "You know what? We're good on donations this year." it would never be restarted.
      • skrtskrt 2 hours ago
        I think the question might be how much money, effort, and expertise is going into the platform itself.
    • cursuve 2 hours ago
      They are rather well funded for a non-profit and the reserves in the endowment fund are very healthy:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Fundraising_statisti...

      https://wikimediafoundation.org/who-we-are/financial-reports...

    • cm2012 3 hours ago
      Wikipedia probably actively wastes $100m per year
      • ale42 2 hours ago
        On what? I'd be curious to read more (documented sources)
        • kbolino 2 hours ago
          Where and how they spent their money is on p. 21 of this PDF [1] which can be obtained from this official source [2]. This is just a high-level breakdown, but it does illustrate that, for example, more than twice as much is spent on "Donation processing expenses" ($7.5M) as "Internet hosting" ($3.1M), and that the largest line item, by far, is "Salaries and benefits" ($106M).

          [1]: https://wikimediafoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/W...

          [2]: https://wikimediafoundation.org/annualreports/2023-2024-annu...

          • streetfighter64 2 hours ago
            Well obviously salaries will be the highest expense in any organization like this. The more interesting question is if it's salaries to security programmers or teachers at an african womens' coding bootcamp (yes they did spend money on that, and yes it's probably useful, but hardly what people think of when they see those "donate now to keep wikipedia alive" banners). A big percentage probably goes to their CEO who does who knows what.
            • kbolino 1 hour ago
              There are a couple of ways to approach this information. One is to compare to the past. For example, comparing with 2008-2009 [1], they now spend 3.75 times as much on hosting, but 48 times as much on salaries, illustrating a more-than-tenfold relative growth in salaries compared to hosting. While hosting is not now nor ever was their only relevant expense, it is a good anchor point.

              Another key difference over the last 15 years has been the introduction of awards and grants, which didn't exist then but now comprise $26.8M (15%) of their expenditures. This is where most of the ideological/controversial spending actually goes, rather than the salaries per se, but even more to the point, this one line item is more than 3 times their entire inflation-adjusted budget from 15 years ago ($5.6M times 150% CPI = $8.4M) and is still more than if we adjusted their entire budget using the hosting cost as an index ($5.6M times 3.75 = $21M).

              [1]: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a4/WMF_Annu...

              • streetfighter64 1 hour ago
                Look, I'm not defending wikipedia, I'd just like to point out that comparing hosting to salaries is a quite strange metric. Hosting is cheap and relatively constant, adding features to the site or paying admins to maintain the quality of edits is scalable. How does throwing more money at hosting make a better product? It's not like the servers can't handle the requests.

                Using hosting costs as an index is nonsensical. I wasn't able to find numbers for 2009, but since 2015 the monthly page views have remained almost exactly constant. So you might as well claim that they're vastly overpaying for hosting since inflation from 2008 is way less than 3.75x.

                • kbolino 1 hour ago
                  I picked hosting because it's a line item that exists across all of their budgets, it's a rough proxy for a web business's non-salary expenses, it's a big part of what you think you're donating to based upon Wikipedia's own language in their fundraising drives, and if nothing else, it's way more forgiving to the growth of their expenses than consumer price inflation is.

                  Ultimately every person has to decide for themselves whether they think WMF is a worthy recipient for their donations, but it is in no way operating on a shoestring budget nor staffed by volunteers anymore.

        • cm2012 47 minutes ago
          Depends how you define waste if you agree. But you could cut $100m yearly and core Wikipedia would still run great.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Guy_Macon/Wikipedia_has_C...

    • Markoff 3 hours ago
      please stop spreading lies, Wikipedia is swimming in money and they have money for years or even decades if they would not waste them on various seminars and other nonsense unrelated to running Wikipedia
    • SoftTalker 2 hours ago
      Society and culture were fine before Wikipedia. I could argue that they have degraded substantially since Wikipedia came into being (but correlation is not causation, in either direction).
  • MagicMoonlight 1 hour ago
    They have no incentive to improve the site, because they’re a for-profit entity.

    Despite the constant screeching for donations, the entire site is owned by a company with shareholders. All the “donations” go to them. They already met their funding needs for the next century a long time ago, this is all profit.

    • charonn0 50 minutes ago
      That's a serious accusation. Can you elaborate? What is the name of the company? Why does the Wikimedia Foundation claim ownership? And if you're referring to the Wikimedia Foundation, then what do you mean by "shareholders"?
  • i_think_so 2 hours ago
    > Hitting MediaWiki:Common.js is the absolute nightmare scenario for MediaWiki deployments because that script gets executed by literally every single visitor

    ...except for us security wonks who have js turned off by default, don't enable it without good reason, disable it ASAP, and take a dim view of websites that require it.

    Not too many years ago this behavior was the domain of Luddites and schizophrenics. Today it has become a useful tool in the toolbox of reasonable self-defense for anybody with UID 0.

    Perhaps the WMF should re-evaluate just how specialsnowflake they think their UI is and see if, maybe just maybe, they can get by without js. Just a thought.

    • bbor 1 hour ago
      It warms my heart that there's basically a 0% chance that they ever approach this camp's viewpoint based on the Herculean effort it took to switch over to a slightly more modern frontend a few years back. I'm glad you don't think of yourself of a Luddite, but I think you're vastly overstating how open people are to a purely-static web.

      Also, FWIW: Wikipedia is "specialsnowflake". If it isn't, that's merely because it was so specialsnowflake that there's now a healthy of ecosystem of sites that copied their features! It's far, far more capable than a simple blog, especially when you get into editing it.

      • i_think_so 42 minutes ago
        Ok, fair point. I presumed that this crowd would be far more familiar with the capabilities of HTML5 and dynamic pages sans js than most. (Surely more familiar than I, who only dabble in code by comparison.)

        No, I'm not suggesting we all go back to purely-static web pages, imagemap gifs and server side navigation. But you're going to have a hard time convincing me that I really truly need to execute code of unknown provenance in my this-app-does-everything-for-me process just to display a few pages of text and 5 jpegs.

        And for the record, I've called myself a Technologist for almost 30 years now. If I were a closet Luddite I'd be one of the greatest hypocrites of human history. :-)

  • Uhhrrr 2 hours ago
    How do they know? Has this been published in a Reliable Source?
    • nhubbard 2 hours ago
      This is the official Wikimedia Foundation status page for the whole of Wikipedia, so it's a reliable primary source.
      • vova_hn2 2 hours ago
        Actually, usage of primary sources is kinda complicated [0], generally Wikipedia prefers secondary and tertiary sources.

        [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:No_original_research...

        • jkaplowitz 2 hours ago
          Yeah, but the purpose of an encyclopedia like Wikipedia (a tertiary source) is to relatively neutrally summarize the consensus of those who spend the time and effort to analyze and interpret the primary sources (and thus produce secondary sources), or if necessary to cite other tertiary summaries of those.

          In a discussion forum like HN, pointing to primary sources is the most reliable input to the other readers' research on/synthesis of their own secondary interpretation of what may be going on. Pointing to other secondary interpretations/analyses is also useful, but not without including the primary source so that others can - with apologies to the phrase currently misused by the US right wing - truly do their own research.

          • Uhhrrr 1 hour ago
            If you spend any time on Wikipedia, you'll find that secondary sources from an existing list are always preferred. The mandate from the link in GP (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:No_original_research) extends, or at least is interpreted to mean to extend to, actively punishing editors who attempt to analyze or interpret primary sources.

            My original post was a joke about this.

  • skrtskrt 2 hours ago
    Long past time to eliminate JavaScript from existence
    • dgxyz 2 hours ago
      This.

      Actually fuck the whole dynamic web. Just give us hypertext again and build native apps.

      Edit: perhaps I shouldn't say this on an VC driven SaaS wankfest forum...

      • rainingmonkey 1 hour ago
        You may be interested in https://geminiprotocol.net/
        • dgxyz 28 minutes ago
          Yes that's exactly what we should be using. Totally agree.
      • dlivingston 1 hour ago
        I mean sure, but that's never going to happen, so complaining about it is just shaking your fist at the sky. The only way it will change is if the economics of the web change. Maybe that is the economics of developer time (it being easier/fast/more resilient and thus cheaper to do native dev), or maybe it is that dynamic scripting leads to such extreme vulnerabilities that ease of deployment/development/consumer usage change the macroeconomics of web deployment enough to shift the scales to local.

        But if there's one thing I've learned over the years as a technologist, it's this: the "best technology" is not often the "technology that wins".

        Engineering is not done in a vacuum. Indeed, my personal definition of engineering is that it is "constraint-based applied science". Yes, some of those constraints are "VC buxx" wanting to see a return on investment, but even the OSS world has its own set of constraints - often overlapping. Time, labor, existing infrastructure, domain knowledge.

        • dgxyz 30 minutes ago
          I think it will change.

          The entire web is built on geopolitical stability and cooperation. That is no longer certain. We already have supply chains failing (RAM/storage) meaning that we will be hardware constrained for the foreseeable future. That puts the onus on efficiency and web apps are NOT efficient however we deliver them.

          People are also now very concerned about data sovereignty whereas they previously were not. If it's not in your hands or on your computer than it is at risk.

          The VC / SaaS / cloud industry is about to get hit very very hard via this and regulation. At that point, it's back to native as delivery is not about being tied to a network control point.

          I've been around long enough to see the centralisation and decentralisation cycles. We're heading the other way now

      • streetfighter64 1 hour ago
        Imagine if wikipedia was a native app, what this vuln would have caused. I for one prefer using stuff in the browser where at least it's sandboxed. Also, there's nothing stopping you from disabling JS in your browser.
        • dgxyz 29 minutes ago
          Wikipedia should be straight hypermedia. Simple.