Top tech firms ban OpenClaw over security breach fears
11 Articles
11 Articles
Top tech firms ban OpenClaw over security breach fears
Major Korean tech companies, including Kakao, Naver and Karrot Market, are moving to restrict the use of the popular artificial intelligence (AI) agent OpenClaw within corporate networks due to the rising concerns about security and data privacy. The move reflects mounting global caution around the autonomous agent that is capable of performing human-like tasks without direct supervision. OpenClaw is a self-hosted, open-source AI agent designed …
China warns of security risks linked to OpenClaw open-source AI agent
China’s industry ministry warned that the popular open-source AI agent OpenClaw may create serious security risks if poorly configured, leaving users vulnerable to hacking and data leaks. Officials said some deployments lacked basic safeguards, urging organisations to review network exposure and strengthen access controls. Use continues to grow despite flaws.
OpenClaw Becomes New Target in Rising Wave of Supply Chain Poisoning Attacks
OpenClaw, a rapidly growing open-source AI agent platform, faces severe supply chain risks as attackers poison its ClawHub plugin marketplace with malicious skills. Security firms SlowMist and Koi Security have uncovered hundreds of compromised extensions deploying infostealers like Atomic Stealer. OpenClaw enables local AI agents to automate workflows, interact with services, and control devices through […] The post OpenClaw Becomes New Target …
OpenClaw (formerly Clawdbot) is the only open-source AI agent that allows users to set up an account on Moltbook, a social networking site for AI agents. It allows users to have their own personalized AI assistant running on their PC, automating various tasks via PC operation and smartphone integration. While anyone can easily enhance OpenClaw's functionality by adding "skills," it has been reported that hundreds of skills containing malicious m…
Under malware threat, runaway AI agent project OpenClaw turns to Google’s VirusTotal - Cybernoz - Cybersecurity News
The OpenClaw autonomous artificial intelligence agent project has teamed up with Google’s VirusTotal malware scanning service, following the discovery of malicious code in the bot framework’s ClawHub skills marketplace. One such malicious skill was discovered recently by Jason Meller at passphrase manager vendor 1Password, who found that a very popular skill for OpenClaw called “Twitter” had a required dependency listed. That dependency turned …
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