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Re: Firefox same-origin policy for fonts


From: Dan Kaminsky <dan () doxpara com>
Date: Sun, 12 Sep 2010 19:56:28 -0400

The idea is the same as crossdomain.xml in flash -- content can
explicitly opt into being shared across domain boundaries.

Our real problem is that there's no way to know whether content is
generically available to the Internet, or just you because of IP
firewalling / cookies / whatnot.  So we have to default to blocking
all cross domain reads, since that other domain might be hosting your
email.

On Sun, Sep 12, 2010 at 7:43 PM,  <paul.szabo () sydney edu au> wrote:
One of my users asked me to install MathJax on my server.
Reading installation instructions in
 http://www.mathjax.org/resources/docs/?installation.html#notes-about-shared-installations
I came across the following:

 ... Firefox's same-origin security policy for cross-domain scripting.
 Firefox's interpretation of the same-origin policy is more strict than
   most other browsers, and it affects how fonts are loaded with the
   @font-face CSS directive. ...
 There is a solution to this, however, if you manage the server ...
   create a file called .htaccess that contains the following lines: ...
   Header set Access-Control-Allow-Origin "*"

That would suggest that this same-origin policy can be defeated by
settings on the "evil" server: the policy is not enforced, useless.
Did I misunderstand something?

(Does not really matter to me, am not planning on using that setting,
but am wondering about Firefox workings.)

Thanks,

Paul Szabo   psz () maths usyd edu au   http://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/psz/
School of Mathematics and Statistics   University of Sydney    Australia

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