# security
Latest news and articles about security
Total: 25 articles found

Drone Crashes and Ignites Inside U.S. Embassy Compound in Iraq, Chinese Reporter On Scene
A Chinese journalist reported that a drone crashed into the U.S. embassy compound in Iraq and ignited, triggering emergency response. With no confirmed casualty or claim of responsibility, the incident underlines growing security challenges posed by small drones and the political difficulty of attribution and response in Iraq’s fragmented security landscape.

Eleven Days Until Nowruz, Many Iranians Hesitate to Go Home as Fear Outweighs Tradition
As Nowruz approaches, many Iranians are opting not to return home, citing safety concerns, legal risks and economic pressures. This reluctance threatens traditional family reunions and carries wider social, economic and political implications for Iran and its diaspora.

From Geek Toy to Workplace Engine: How OpenClaw’s ‘Agent’ Boom Exposes a New Fault Line in AI
OpenClaw—an open‑source AI agent that executes tasks on local machines—has catalysed rapid adoption and alarm across China. It promises a shift from content‑centric AI to agents that perform real work, but its deep system privileges, a permissive plugin market and numerous disclosed vulnerabilities have prompted regulatory warnings and institutional bans. The likely trajectory is commercial hardening and new governance regimes, but risks to security and inequality remain acute.

Everyone’s Raising a ‘Lobster’: How OpenClaw Turned Workers into AI Employers and Big Tech into Shovel-Sellers
OpenClaw, an open-source agent framework, has ignited a grassroots boom in China where users deploy autonomous AI agents to automate work. The surge is creating lucrative install-and-host businesses and handing cloud and model vendors a new token-driven monetization route, even as security risks and misconfigurations prompt official warnings.

Tencent’s Five-Pronged Push into AI Agents: Building an entrance to WeChat and the cloud
Tencent launched five AI agents across desktop, social and cloud products as part of a push to capture developers and users for its AI infrastructure. The rapid roll‑out seeks to monetise compute and embed agents into WeChat’s mini‑program economy, but faces security, cost and scaling challenges that will determine whether the strategy pays off.

China’s ‘Lobster’ Craze: OpenClaw Agents Promise New Productivity — and New Risks
OpenClaw agents, nicknamed “lobsters,” are spurring a wave of desktop automation in China that promises increased productivity and new business models but also raises steep costs and security concerns. A NetEase salon on March 13 convened industry leaders to share deployment guides, case studies and safety practices as the technology moves from hobby to enterprise adoption.

OpenClaw and the ‘Shrimp‑Raising’ Gold Rush: China’s AI Agents Set Off Cloud Wars, Street‑Level Entrepreneurship and Security Alarms
OpenClaw, an open‑source agent framework that runs locally and can autonomously act on behalf of users, has sparked a rapid commercial and cultural frenzy in China. Cloud providers, model companies and street‑level installers are racing to monetise deployments, but high token costs, security vulnerabilities from root permissions and an immature commercial ecosystem pose significant obstacles to sustainable adoption.

China’s ‘Crayfish’ Craze: Open-source AI Agents Spark Cloud Arms Race, Subsidies and Security Alarms
OpenClaw — an open‑source agent middleware — has ignited mass adoption in China, prompting cloud giants to offer free installations to capture long‑term infrastructure revenue. Municipal subsidies and cheap domestic model pricing have accelerated deployment, even as regulators warn of major security and lock‑in risks. The episode underscores a strategic divergence between China’s rapid commercialisation of agents and more cautious approaches abroad.

‘Lobster’ Mania: Cloud and Model Firms Cash In as OpenClaw Sparks a Token Surge
OpenClaw, an open-source AI agent platform dubbed “Lobster,” has ignited widespread deployment in China, prompting cloud vendors and model providers to capitalise on surging token consumption. While the rush is boosting short-term revenues and stock prices, security vulnerabilities, high running costs and a shortage of mature use cases temper the enthusiasm.

The Digital 'Lobster' Craze: OpenClaw’s Promise of Passive Income Collides with Bills, Bugs and Security Risks
OpenClaw, an agent platform dubbed the “dragon‑lobster,” has sparked frenzied interest in China but the economics and risks greatly limit who can profit from running instances. Startups and technically proficient individuals can monetize deployments, but ordinary users face non‑trivial time, electricity, token fees and security exposures that often outweigh modest earnings. The situation points to a coming consolidation toward managed, vetted services and clearer regulatory guardrails.

Tencent Unveils WorkBuddy Desktop AI as OpenClaw Craze Forces Cloud Vendors Into Agent Race
Tencent has launched WorkBuddy, a desktop AI agent compatible with OpenClaw skills and integrable with enterprise messaging apps. Positioned as a managed, enterprise‑grade alternative to DIY OpenClaw deployments, WorkBuddy emphasises multi‑model support, multi‑agent workflows and built‑in security auditing amid rising demand and regulatory warnings over agent security.

OpenClaw Frenzy: How an Open‑Source AI Agent Is Rewiring China’s Tech Ecosystem — Fast, Commercial, Risky
OpenClaw, an open‑source AI agent, has been rapidly adopted across China thanks to cloud operators, startups and developer communities that have quickly packaged and commercialised its capabilities. The rush to deploy has accelerated innovation but raised serious data‑security and regulatory concerns that Chinese authorities and vendors are scrambling to address.