Caution! ClawHub has hidden 1184 malicious skills: stealing crypto wallet private keys, SSH keys, browser passwords…

動區BlockTempo
WELL-0.42%
SOL3.13%
DEFI-4.3%
ETH-0.32%

OpenClaw Skill Marketplace Revealed to Contain Over 1,000 Malicious Plugins Designed to Steal SSH Keys and Wallet Private Keys
The “Trust Default” in AI Tool Ecosystems Is Becoming the Most Underestimated Attack Surface in Web3
(Background: Bloomberg: Why is a16z a Key Player Behind U.S. AI Policy?)
(Additional context: Arthur Hayes’ latest article: AI Will Trigger a Credit Collapse, and the Fed Will Ultimately “Print Unlimited” to Ignite Bitcoin)

Table of Contents

  • Text Is No Longer Just Text, It’s Commands
  • Moonwell’s $1.78 Million Lesson
  • The Wrong Trust Default

Earlier, Cosine, founder of SlowMist, issued a warning on X: In the OpenClaw ClawHub skill marketplace, approximately 1,184 malicious skill plugins can steal users’ SSH keys, crypto wallet private keys, browser passwords, and even establish reverse shell backdoors. The top malicious skills contain 9 vulnerabilities, with thousands of downloads.

Reminder: Text is no longer just text, it’s commands. When using AI tools, always operate in an isolated environment…

Skills are very dangerous⚠️
Skills are very dangerous⚠️
Skills are very dangerous⚠️ https://t.co/GZ3hhathkE

— Cos(余弦)😶‍🌫️ (@evilcos) February 20, 2026

ClawHub is the official marketplace for OpenClaw (formerly clawbot), which recently gained popularity. Users install third-party extensions to enable AI agents to perform various tasks, from code deployment to wallet management.

Koi Security first exposed this attack campaign named “ClawHavoc” at the end of January, initially identifying 341 malicious skills. Later, independent security researchers and Antiy CERT expanded the scope to 1,184, involving 12 publisher accounts. One attacker, alias hightower6eu, uploaded 677 packages alone, accounting for over half of the total.

In other words, a single individual contaminated more than half of the marketplace’s malicious content, and the platform’s review mechanisms failed to stop it.

Text Is No Longer Just Text, It’s Commands

These malicious skills are not crude. They disguise themselves as crypto trading bots, Solana wallet trackers, Polymarket strategy tools, YouTube summarizers, complete with professional documentation. The real malicious payload is hidden in the “Prerequisites” section of the SKILL.md file: guiding users to copy a obfuscated shell script from an external website and paste it into their terminal.

This script downloads Atomic Stealer (AMOS), a macOS info-stealing tool costing $500 to $1,000 per month, from a command-and-control (C2) server.

AMOS scans include browser passwords, SSH keys, Telegram chat logs, Phantom wallet private keys, exchange API keys, and all files in desktop and document folders. Attackers even registered multiple variants of ClawHub domains (clawhub1, clawhubb, cllawhub) for domain impersonation, with two Polymarket-themed skills containing reverse shell backdoors.

The malicious skills’ files also embed AI prompt instructions designed to deceive the OpenClaw agent itself, causing the AI to “recommend” malicious commands to users. Cosine summarized sharply: “Text is no longer just text, it’s commands.” When using AI tools, operate in an isolated environment.

This is the core issue. When users trust AI’s suggestions, and the AI’s source is compromised, the entire trust chain breaks.

Moonwell’s $1.78 Million Lesson

In the same warning, Cosine highlighted another incident: on February 15, DeFi lending protocol Moonwell incurred $1.78 million in bad debt due to a price oracle error.

The problem stemmed from a piece of code calculating the USD price of cbETH, which forgot to multiply the cbETH/ETH exchange rate by ETH/USD, causing cbETH to be priced at about $1.12 instead of the actual $2,200. Liquidation bots swept through all positions collateralized with cbETH, resulting in approximately 2.68 million USD in losses for 181 borrowers.

Blockchain security auditor Krum Pashov traced the code’s GitHub commit, which was labeled “Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6.” NeuralTrust’s analysis precisely described the trap: “The code looks correct, compiles, and passes basic unit tests, but fails completely in the adversarial DeFi environment.”

Even more concerning, manual review, GitHub Copilot, and OpenZeppelin Code Inspector all failed to detect the missing multiplication step.

The community dubbed this incident a “Major Security Breach in the Vibe Coding Era.” Cosine’s takeaway is clear: security threats in Web3 are no longer limited to smart contracts; AI tools are becoming a new attack vector.

The Wrong Trust Default

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger has implemented a community reporting system, automatically hiding suspicious skills after three reports. Koi Security also released a scanning tool, Clawdex, but these are just band-aids.

The fundamental problem is that the AI ecosystem’s default setting is “trust”: trusting uploaded skills as safe, trusting AI recommendations as correct, trusting generated code as reliable. When this ecosystem manages crypto wallets and DeFi protocols, a wrong default can cost real money.

Note: VanEck’s data shows that by the end of 2025, there will be over 10,000 AI agents in crypto, expected to surpass 1 million in 2026.

View Original
Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

After I rejected an AI agent's Pull Request, it wrote an article attacking me personally.

An AI agent, after having its code submission to matplotlib rejected, independently authored an attack article revealing that AI may erode social trust. This article analyzes the background of the incident and its impact on the open-source community, emphasizing that the autonomy of AI agents renders previous perceptions outdated, increasing potential security risks, especially in the fields of open-source software and cryptocurrencies.

動區BlockTempo4h ago

Polymarket hacked, with vulnerabilities in the off-chain and on-chain transaction result synchronization mechanism

Polymarket was hacked due to a design flaw. The attacker exploited nonce manipulation to invalidate on-chain transactions, resulting in user losses. Users are advised to suspend automated trading tools, verify transaction statuses, and enhance security.

GateNewsBot5h ago

Balancer suspends reCLAMM-related pools due to security vulnerability reports, ensuring user fund safety

Foresight News reports that Balancer announced they received a security report about Balancer's reCLAMM (rebalancing concentrated liquidity AMM) from the vulnerability bounty platform Immunefi. As a precaution, Balancer has suspended the operation of related liquidity pools during the investigation. The official emphasizes that user funds are safe and fully accessible, and further updates will be announced continuously.

GateNewsBot5h ago

Hacker returns 21 million USD worth of stolen Bitcoin to Korean authorities

South Korean prosecutors recovered approximately $21.4 million in stolen Bitcoin. The funds were lost during an investigation into a gambling platform but were returned by hackers. Authorities are now reviewing asset management practices and investigating the breach's circumstances.

TapChiBitcoin5h ago

Former Australian defense personnel pleads guilty to selling hacking tools, accepting payments in crypto

Peter Williams, an Australian citizen, pleaded guilty to stealing trade secrets in Washington after selling sensitive cyberattack tools linked to Russia. He received $1.26 million in cryptocurrency, which he spent on luxury items and real estate, resulting in damages exceeding 19,283,746,565,748,392,01 dollars for the affected companies. The prosecution is seeking a nine-year sentence and 19,283,746,565,748,392,01 dollars in restitution, emphasizing the role of cryptocurrency in espionage-related transactions.

TapChiBitcoin5h ago

Security Reminder: A total of 1,184 malicious skills have been identified on the ClawHub marketplace, potentially stealing SSH keys, crypto wallets, and more.

SlowMist founder Yu Xian warns that OpenClaw's ClawHub marketplace has identified 1,184 malicious skills that may steal users' sensitive information. Users are advised to exercise caution when using AI tools to ensure safety. Additionally, Moonwell was recently hacked for $1.78 million due to a code flaw.

GateNewsBot6h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments
Trade Crypto Anywhere Anytime
qrCode
Scan to download Gate App
Community
English
  • 简体中文
  • English
  • Tiếng Việt
  • 繁體中文
  • Español
  • Русский
  • Français (Afrique)
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • 日本語
  • بالعربية
  • Українська
  • Português (Brasil)