Oasis Security researchers find yet another security problem with the OpenClaw AI agent, with this one allowing malicious websites to silently take control of a developer's system and steal data.
An OpenClaw vulnerability allowed malicious websites to take over AI agents, exposing sensitive information and enabling data theft.
The Oasis researchers document a vulnerability chain that can be initiated from any website the AI agent (or its user) visits ...
The now-patched flaw is the latest in a growing string of security issues with the viral AI tool, which has seen rapid adoption among developers.
Why Passwords Are Still a Developer's Problem in 2026. The case against password-based authentication is well-established in the IAM community, but the practical implications for ...
Oasis Security reveals how a new ClawJacked vulnerability could allow attackers to silently take over a victim’s OpenClaw ...
A serious vulnerability in the open-source AI agent OpenClaw made it possible for arbitrary websites to take complete control ...
OpenAI launches Codex Security AI agent that scanned 1.2M commits, finding 792 critical and 10,561 high-severity ...
Don't leave your OpenClaw with an easy password ...
Server-side rendering vulnerabilities could allow attackers to steal authorization headers or perpetrate phishing and SEO hacking.
Google has confirmed three new critical security vulnerabilities that could allow remote attacks on Chrome users as the ...
One is a zero-day that has been actively exploited.