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Data Theft Repackaged: A Case Study in Malicious Wrapper Packages on npm
The Socket Research Team breaks down a malicious wrapper package that uses obfuscation to harvest credentials and exfiltrate sensitive data.
protonmail-api-client
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This is not an official python ProtonMail API client. it allows you to read, send and delete messages in protonmail, as well as render a ready-made template with embedded images.
This is not an official python ProtonMail API client. it allows you to read, send and delete messages in protonmail, as well as render a ready-made template with embedded images.
[!NOTE] Congratulations, no need more to execute OpenPGP.js via playwright 🎉🎉🎉
pip install protonmail-api-client
from protonmail import ProtonMail
username = "YouAddress@proton.me"
password = "YourPassword123"
proton = ProtonMail()
proton.login(username, password)
# Get a list of all messages
messages = proton.get_messages()
# Read the latest message
message = proton.read_message(messages[0])
print(message.sender.address) # sender address
print(message.subject) # subject
print(message.body)
# <html><body><div>it's my image: <img src="cid:1234@proton.me">....
# Render the template, images downloading, converting to BASE64 and insert into html
proton.render(message)
# This is a ready-made html page, with all the pictures, you can save it right away
with open('message.html', 'w', encoding='utf-8') as f:
f.write(message.body)
print(message.body)
# <html><body><div>it's my image: <img src="data:image/png;base64, iVBORw0K..">....
# Download file from message
first_file = message.attachments[0]
proton.download_files([first_file])
with open(f'{first_file.name}', 'wb') as f:
f.write(first_file.content)
# Create attachments
with open('image.png', 'rb') as f:
img = f.read()
with open('resume.pdf', 'rb') as f:
pdf = f.read()
img_attachment = proton.create_attachment(content=img, name='image.png')
pdf_attachment = proton.create_attachment(content=pdf, name='resume.pdf')
html = f"""
<html>
<body>
<h2>Hi, I'm a python developer, here's my photo:</h2>
<img {img_attachment.get_embedded_attrs()} height="150" width="300">
<br/>
Look at my resume, it is attached to the letter.
</body>
</html>
"""
# Send message
new_message = proton.create_message(
recipients=["to1@proton.me", "to2@gmail.com"],
subject="My first message",
body=html, # html or just text
attachments=[img_attachment, pdf_attachment],
)
sent_message = proton.send_message(new_message)
# Wait for new message
new_message = proton.wait_for_new_message(interval=1, timeout=60, rise_timeout=False, read_message=True)
if 'spam' in new_message.body:
# Delete spam
proton.delete_messages([new_message])
# Save session, you do not have to re-enter your login, password, pgp key, passphrase
# WARNING: the file contains sensitive data, do not share it with anyone,
# otherwise someone will gain access to your mail.
proton.save_session('session.pickle')
# Load session
proton = ProtonMail()
proton.load_session('session.pickle', auto_save=True)
# Autosave is needed to save tokens if they are updated
# (the access token is only valid for 24 hours and will be updated automatically)
# Getting a list of all sessions in which you are authorized
proton.get_all_sessions()
# Revoke all sessions except the current one
proton.revoke_all_sessions()
Event polling. Polling ends in 3 cases:
None
.SystemExit
exception.For example, wait indefinitely until 2 messages arrive.
def callback(response: dict, new_messages: list):
messages = response.get('Messages', [])
new_messages.extend(messages)
if len(new_messages) >= 2:
raise SystemExit
new_messages = []
proton.event_polling(callback, new_messages)
print(new_messages)
FAQs
This is not an official python ProtonMail API client. it allows you to read, send and delete messages in protonmail, as well as render a ready-made template with embedded images.
We found that protonmail-api-client demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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