PT-2026-48683 · Npm · @Element-Hq/Element-Call-Embedded
Published
2026-06-11
·
Updated
2026-06-11
·
CVE-2026-48007
CVSS v4.0
8.6
High
| Vector | AV:N/AC:L/AT:N/PR:L/UI:N/VC:H/VI:H/VA:N/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N |
Impact
Element Call versions 0.5.17 through 0.19.3 report analytics data to a PostHog server, when configured to by a
posthog key in config.json or by the posthogApiHost and posthogApiKey URL parameters. Several fields of this data ($initial person info, $session entry url, and $current url) were found to contain the full URL of the user's visited page, including the fragment.Users of a standalone Element Call ‘SPA’ instance such as https://call.element.io may therefore have reported the full URLs of certain calls, including encryption passwords, to the configured PostHog server, potentially compromising the confidentiality of the calls to actors who could access both the PostHog analytics data and the encrypted media streams.
The same issue is present in Element Call's embedded package, but in practice it does not impact applications using this package (including Element Web, Element Desktop, Element X iOS, and Element X Android) because they distribute encryption keys over Matrix rather than encoding a password in the URL.
Patches
Patched in Element Call 0.19.4.
Workarounds
Users may opt out of analytics in the 'Feedback' tab of Element Call's settings and create new links for future calls.
Admins who host Element Call as a standalone application may disable PostHog analytics entirely by removing the
posthog key from their deployment's config.json file.For more information
If there are any questions or comments about this advisory, please send an email to security at element.io.
Fix
Information Disclosure
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Weakness Enumeration
Related Identifiers
Affected Products
@Element-Hq/Element-Call-Embedded