Docker Had a 10-Year Security Bypass Hidden in Plain Sight
Docker’s Security Layer Has Been Broken Since 2016, And The Fix Doesn’t Finish the Job. One padded HTTP request. That is all it takes to silently disable every authorization plugin in Docker, open a direct path to the host filesystem, and walk out with AWS credentials, SSH keys, and Kubernetes cluster access. The authorization logs show nothing unusual. 😏
When a request hits the Docker API, an authorization plugin steps in before anything else happens. That plugin checks exactly what is being requested before the Docker daemon gets to act on it, and enterprises run tools like Open Policy Agent, Prisma Cloud, or Casbin for this job, configured with rules about what containers are and are not allowed to do.









