Am I affected?
You are affected if all of the following are true:
- You use
better-auth at a version >= 1.6.0, < 1.6.11.
- The
deviceAuthorization plugin is enabled in your auth config (deviceAuthorization() in your plugins array).
- A third party can observe a pending user code before the legitimate user completes verification.
The standard device-flow UX displays user codes to humans, so realistic exposure includes shoulder-surfing, screen-share, voice or video calls, support-chat transcripts, referrer headers, and shared logs.
If your application does not enable the deviceAuthorization plugin, you are not affected.
Fix:
- Upgrade to
better-auth@1.6.11 or later.
- If you cannot upgrade, see workarounds below.
Summary
Better Auth's deviceAuthorization plugin treated any authenticated session as the owner of any pending device code. The ownership gate on POST /device/approve and POST /device/deny short-circuited whenever the row's userId was unset, and the GET /device verification handler did not claim the row. An authenticated attacker who learned a valid user_code before the legitimate user completed approval could bind the polling device to the attacker's account or deny the legitimate flow.
Details
The device authorization flow binds the polling device to the user who entered the user code on the verification page. In affected versions, the plugin only created that binding at approve or deny time, with no claim at the verification step. The ownership check at approve and deny short-circuited when the owner was missing, accepting any authenticated caller instead of rejecting the request.
The fix changes GET /device to claim the pending row for the calling session. The approve and deny gates now require strict equality between the row's owner and the calling session. RFC 8628 §5.5 covers this risk class as Session Spying: a malicious party can hijack a session by completing authorization before the legitimate initiating user does.
Patches
Fixed in better-auth@1.6.11. After the patch, GET /device claims the pending row for the calling session, and POST /device/approve and POST /device/deny reject calls whose session does not match the claimed owner. Custom verification pages must serve GET /device to an authenticated session for the flow to succeed.
Workarounds
If you cannot upgrade immediately:
- Disable the plugin if you do not use the device flow: remove
deviceAuthorization() from your plugins array.
- Add a
before hook on POST /device/approve and POST /device/deny that tracks which session called GET /device for each user code, and rejects calls from a different session.
- Shorten the pending lifetime of device codes via the
expiresIn plugin option to reduce the exploitation window.
Impact
- Account takeover on the polling device: the attacker's session becomes the device's session, so the device operates as the attacker.
- Denial of the legitimate sign-in: the attacker can mark the code as denied, blocking the victim's flow.
Credit
Reported by Quikturn Security Team.
References
Am I affected?
You are affected if all of the following are true:
better-authat a version>= 1.6.0, < 1.6.11.deviceAuthorizationplugin is enabled in your auth config (deviceAuthorization()in yourpluginsarray).The standard device-flow UX displays user codes to humans, so realistic exposure includes shoulder-surfing, screen-share, voice or video calls, support-chat transcripts, referrer headers, and shared logs.
If your application does not enable the
deviceAuthorizationplugin, you are not affected.Fix:
better-auth@1.6.11or later.Summary
Better Auth's
deviceAuthorizationplugin treated any authenticated session as the owner of any pending device code. The ownership gate onPOST /device/approveandPOST /device/denyshort-circuited whenever the row'suserIdwas unset, and theGET /deviceverification handler did not claim the row. An authenticated attacker who learned a validuser_codebefore the legitimate user completed approval could bind the polling device to the attacker's account or deny the legitimate flow.Details
The device authorization flow binds the polling device to the user who entered the user code on the verification page. In affected versions, the plugin only created that binding at approve or deny time, with no claim at the verification step. The ownership check at approve and deny short-circuited when the owner was missing, accepting any authenticated caller instead of rejecting the request.
The fix changes
GET /deviceto claim the pending row for the calling session. The approve and deny gates now require strict equality between the row's owner and the calling session. RFC 8628 §5.5 covers this risk class as Session Spying: a malicious party can hijack a session by completing authorization before the legitimate initiating user does.Patches
Fixed in
better-auth@1.6.11. After the patch,GET /deviceclaims the pending row for the calling session, andPOST /device/approveandPOST /device/denyreject calls whose session does not match the claimed owner. Custom verification pages must serveGET /deviceto an authenticated session for the flow to succeed.Workarounds
If you cannot upgrade immediately:
deviceAuthorization()from yourpluginsarray.beforehook onPOST /device/approveandPOST /device/denythat tracks which session calledGET /devicefor each user code, and rejects calls from a different session.expiresInplugin option to reduce the exploitation window.Impact
Credit
Reported by Quikturn Security Team.
References