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marcd35today at 8:06 PM6 repliesview on HN

something about giving full read write access to every file on my PC and internet message interface just rubs me the wrong way. some unscrupulous actors are probably chomping at the bit looking for vulnerabilities to get carte blanche unrestricted access. be safe out there kiddos


Replies

Flere-Imsahotoday at 9:18 PM

I run it in an LXC container which is hosted on a proxmox server, which is an Intel i7 NUC. Running 24x7. The container contains all the tools it needs.

No need to worry about security, unless you consider container breakout a concern.

I wouldn't run it in my personal laptop.

show 1 reply
spondyltoday at 8:15 PM

This would seem to be inline with the development philosophy for clawdbot. I like the concept but I was put off by the lack of concern around security, specifically for something that interfaces with the internet

> These days I don’t read much code anymore. I watch the stream and sometimes look at key parts, but I gotta be honest - most code I don’t read.

I think it's fine for your own side projects not meant for others but Clawdbot is, to some degree, packaged for others to use it seems.

https://steipete.me/posts/2025/shipping-at-inference-speed

AlexCoventrytoday at 8:54 PM

Yeah, this new trend of handing over all your keys to an AI and letting it rip looks like a horrific security nightmare, to me. I get that they're powerful tools, but they still have serious prompt-injection vulnerabilities. Not to mention that you're giving your model provider de facto access to your entire life and recorded thoughts.

Sam Altman was also recently encouraging people to give OpenAI models full access to their computing resources.

cobolcomesbacktoday at 8:20 PM

At minimum this thing should be installed in its own VM. I shudder to think of people running this on their personal machine…

I’ve been toying around with it and the only credentials I’m giving it are specifically scoped down and/or are new user accounts created specifically for this thing to use. I don’t trust this thing at all with my own personal GitHub credentials or anything that’s even remotely touching my credit cards.

OGEnthusiasttoday at 8:20 PM

That's almost 100% likely to have already happened without anyone even noticing. I doubt many of these people are monitoring their Moltbot/Clawdbot logs to even notice a remote prompt or a prompt injection attack that siphons up all their email.

fantasizrtoday at 8:55 PM

wanting control over my computer and what it does makes me luddite in 2026 apparently.