OpenClaw: Why an enterprise nightmare is brewing



Quantum Computing
OpenClaw-Quelle-Rokas Tenys-Shutterstock-2733967181-1920
AI
Overcoming fragmentation
Fragmented IAM, CIAM, and partner IAM landscapes are becoming a risk for many companies. Identity Fabric connects existing systems through a central control layer, strengthening governance, zero trust, and digital sovereignty.
Critical WordPress plugin bug
A critical vulnerability in the WordPress plugin Breeze Cache allows attackers to take over entire websites. More than 400,000 installations are affected.
AI vulnerability scanning
China’s 360 Digital Security Group claims to have found around 1,000 vulnerabilities with the help of a multi-agent system, including at the Tianfu Cup hacking contest. The capabilities are said to approach those of Anthropic’s new Claude Mythos model. Doubts remain.
Competition law in the EU
The European Commission is pushing Google to open Android to AI competitors such as ChatGPT and Claude. Formal specification proceedings and billion euro fines are looming.
Smart devices and the Internet of Things
Security authorities are warning that Chinese hackers are using infiltrated devices to spy on political figures and companies in a targeted manner. The threat also extends to private IT equipment and smart devices.
Data gone anyway
Companies that pay after an attack usually do not get their data back anyway. A new study reveals how unprepared small businesses are for ransomware and why the ransom trap is so dangerous.
Classified as a zero-day vulnerability
More than 1,300 publicly accessible Microsoft SharePoint servers remain vulnerable to a critical spoofing security flaw that is already being actively exploited by threat actors.
Anthropic: No evidence so far
A media report is raising questions about the security measures surrounding a new AI model from Anthropic that is exceptionally capable of finding software vulnerabilities.
Next.js develope
A Vercel employee granted a third-party AI tool full OAuth access to their corporate Google Workspace account. Attackers exploited that access and worked their way deep into the infrastructure of the company behind Next.js.