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clawlink Security Audit Report

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clawlink is an AI agent skill, created by davemorin and published at openclaw/skills. ClawSecure audited clawlink across 34 files through the 3-Layer Audit Protocol covering all ten OWASP ASI Top 10 categories, assigning a security score of 65/100 (Medium Risk). The 5 findings concentrate in Code Injection, Policy Violation and Permissions Manifest, including Potentially dangerous code pattern detected: base64.*decode and Potentially dangerous code pattern detected: base64.*decode. 3 were rated high or critical severity.

Is clawlink safe?

ClawSecure audited clawlink and assigned a security score of 65/100 (Medium Risk), identifying 5 findings across Code Injection and Policy Violation. Review the findings below before installing.

What did ClawSecure find in clawlink?

ClawSecure identified 5 findings in clawlink, concentrated in Code Injection, Policy Violation and Permissions Manifest. 3 were rated high or critical severity. The most severe include Potentially dangerous code pattern detected: base64.*decode and Potentially dangerous code pattern detected: base64.*decode.

How was clawlink audited?

ClawSecure ran clawlink through its 3-Layer Audit Protocol with full OWASP ASI Top 10 coverage, scanning 34 files from openclaw/skills.

What does a score of 65 mean?

ClawSecure assigned clawlink a security score of 65/100, placing it in the Medium Risk range. This reflects 5 findings led by Code Injection that warrant review before production use. ClawSecure derives this score with a weighted deduction model (critical -20, high -10, medium -5, low -2 from a base of 100).

Audit Findings for clawlink

ClawSecure detected 5 security findings in clawlink, spanning Code Injection, Policy Violation and Permissions Manifest.

Each finding is expandable in the interactive list below.

3-Layer Audit Protocol

Security Recommendations for clawlink

Eliminate dynamic code execution
clawlink evaluates code at runtime (for example eval or dynamic exec). Remove dynamic evaluation of untrusted input, and where code generation is unavoidable, sandbox it and validate every input.
Resolve policy violations
clawlink trips ClawSecure policy checks. Review each flagged pattern against your security policy and remediate or document an accepted exception before production use.
Add a config.json permissions manifest
A config.json file declares what an agent component can access: file system, network, shell execution and more. Without it, users have no visibility into what the component can do before installing. This is the single most impactful security improvement for any AI agent skill.
Pin dependencies to exact versions
Unpinned dependencies allow supply-chain attacks where a compromised version is pulled in automatically. Use exact version numbers in package.json (for example 1.2.3 instead of ^1.2.3) to keep unauthorized code out of your dependency tree. ClawSecure checks every dependency against known CVE databases.

Related Security Research

Why Generic Scanners Fail at AI Agent SecurityBeyond Static Scans: Why ClawSecure Verifies Agentic IntentOWASP ASI Top 10 Explained: The Complete Guide to AI Agent Security Standards

Related AI Agent Security Audits

kokoro-ttsScore 75/100probe-14-webhookScore 50/100agentpulseScore 80/100proactive-messagesScore 80/100agentpulseScore 80/100

Scanned on February 15, 2026. clawlink is one of thousands of agents audited by ClawSecure from the community-curated awesome-openclaw-skills list and the openclaw/skills repository.

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