I don't think that '.' in @INC is a security risk in the same way as '.' in $ENV{PATH} would be.
With PATH there is a risk of root cd'ing into a directory and running a trojaned ls compromising the system. An attacker might have write access to their home directory, which would be expected (under the assumption that the attacker is an authorised user)
With @INC if the attacker can write a trojaned CGI.pm then they would have write access to the directory, and the could just as easily unlink the script it self and replace it with a trojaned version.
Correct me if I'm missing something.
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