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Pico 3.0.0-alpha.2 Exploit May 2026

Pico has traditionally been praised for its simplicity—no database, just Markdown files. The leap to version 3.0 introduced a revamped plugin system and internal routing logic. While these features increase flexibility, they also expanded the attack surface, particularly regarding how the CMS handles user-inputted file paths and plugin configurations. Known Vulnerability Vectors 1. Path Traversal & Local File Inclusion (LFI)

If successful, this allows an unauthorized user to read sensitive system files like /etc/passwd or the CMS's own configuration files ( config/config.yml ), which may contain API keys or secret salts. 2. Remote Code Execution (RCE) via Twig Templates Pico 3.0.0-alpha.2 Exploit

If an exploit can inject malicious code into a Markdown file's YAML front matter that is then rendered via an unsanitized Twig filter, the server may execute arbitrary PHP commands. The Impact: Full server compromise. 3. Insecure Plugin Hooks Pico has traditionally been praised for its simplicity—no

Ensure debug mode is turned off in your PHP configuration to prevent sensitive path leakage during a crash. Known Vulnerability Vectors 1

An attacker might attempt to bypass the content directory restrictions by using ../ sequences in the URI.

The redesigned plugin API in this alpha version lacks some of the mature "sandboxing" found in the 2.x stable branch. If a site administrator installs a third-party plugin designed for the 3.0 architecture, a "Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)" or "Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF)" vulnerability can be introduced through unvalidated hook callbacks. Mitigation and Defense