Ajax request: Refused to set unsafe header Ajax request: Refused to set unsafe header ajax ajax

Ajax request: Refused to set unsafe header


You can't. It is impossible.

The specification requires that the browser abort the setRequestHeader method if you try to set the Referer header (it used to be that User-Agent was also forbidden but that has changed)..

If you need to set Referer manually then you'll need to make the request from your server and not your visitor's browser.

(That said, if you need to be deceptive about the user agent or referer then you are probably trying to use the service in a fashion that the owner of it does not want, so you should respect that and stop trying).

Note that while jQuery wraps XHR, the same rules apply to fetch.


Empty Origin and Referer headers with GET XMLHttpRequest from <iframe>

Well actually, it is possible; at least for ordinary web pages.The trick consists in injecting an XMLHttpRequestfunction into an empty <iframe>.The origin of an empty <iframe> happens to be about://blank, which results in empty Origin and Referer HTTP headers.

HTML:

<iframe id="iframe"></iframe>

JavaScript:

const iframe    = document.getElementById('iframe');const iframeWin = iframe.contentWindow || iframe;const iframeDoc = iframe.contentDocument || iframeWin.document;let script = iframeDoc.createElement('SCRIPT');script.append(`function sendWithoutOrigin(url) {    var request = new XMLHttpRequest();    request.open('GET', url);    request.onreadystatechange = function() {        if(request.readyState === XMLHttpRequest.DONE) {            if(request.status === 200) {                console.log('GET succeeded.');            }            else {                console.warn('GET failed.');            }        }    }    request.send();}`);iframeDoc.documentElement.appendChild(script);

JavaScript evocation:

var url  = 'https://api.serivce.net/';    url += '?api_key=' + api_write_key;    url += '&field1=' + value;iframeWin.sendWithoutOrigin(url);

Having the possibility of sending empty Origin and Referer HTTP headers is important to safeguard privacy when using third-party API services. There are instances where the originating domain name may reveal sensitive personal information; like being suggestive of a certain medical condition for example. Think in terms of https://hypochondriasis-support.org :-D

The code was tested by inspecting the requests in a .har file, saved from the Network tab in the F12 Developer View in Vivaldi.

No attempt in setting the User-Agent header was made. Please, comment if this also works.