Summary
After authorizing access to a RAC endpoint, authentik creates a token which is used for a single connection and is sent to the client in the URL. This token is intended to only be valid for the session of the user who authorized the connection, however this check is currently missing.
Patches
authentik 2025.4.3 and 2025.6.3 fix this issue.
Impact
When for example using RAC during a screenshare, a malicious user could access the same session by copying the URL from the shown browser.
Workarounds
As a workaround it is recommended to decrease the duration a token is valid for (in the RAC Provider settings, set Connection expiry to minutes=5
for example). We also recommend enabling the option Delete authorization on disconnect.
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
Summary
After authorizing access to a RAC endpoint, authentik creates a token which is used for a single connection and is sent to the client in the URL. This token is intended to only be valid for the session of the user who authorized the connection, however this check is currently missing.
Patches
authentik 2025.4.3 and 2025.6.3 fix this issue.
Impact
When for example using RAC during a screenshare, a malicious user could access the same session by copying the URL from the shown browser.
Workarounds
As a workaround it is recommended to decrease the duration a token is valid for (in the RAC Provider settings, set Connection expiry to
minutes=5
for example). We also recommend enabling the option Delete authorization on disconnect.For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory: