this post was submitted on 07 Jun 2026
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With a competently crafted payload, you could perhaps get in via someone's transcoding pipeline.
Does nobody isolate ffmpeg and friends from their application?
I can't imagine you'd have much fun breaking into a container that terminates the moment the original ffmpeg stops, or over-runs its max execution time..
Sure, you'd need a second exploit to escalate from there.
ffmpeg is expected to run for extended periods of time, given its use in transcoding.
Container escapes do exist, and they have shared kernel with the host
If you're running rootless containers, it's less of a concern. I'm trying to move all of my public containers to podman for this reason