New HalluSquatting Attack Could Trick AI Coding Assistants Into Installing Botnet Malware

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AI coding assistants have a habit of making things up. Ask one to fetch a popular tool, and it will sometimes hand back a real-sounding name for a project that does not exist. New research, which its authors call HalluSquatting, turns that habit into an attack: work out the fake names an AI reliably invents, register them first, and wait for the assistant to fetch your trap on a user's
1Key Takeaways
- AI coding assistants have a habit of making things up.
- Ask one to fetch a popular tool, and it will sometimes hand back a real-sounding name for a project that does not exist.
- New research, which its authors call HalluSquatting, turns that habit into an attack: work out the fake names an AI reliably invents, register them first, and wait for the assistant to fetch your trap on a user's.
2AIWedia Score
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3Why it matters
Tool launches and updates shape which workflows teams adopt and which vendors gain traction. The Hacker News reports that aI coding assistants have a habit of making things up.
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