Lobster (OpenClaw) has become very popular recently, triggering the carnival of many companies and individual users. For a time, the "national shrimp farming" has become an unprecedented phenomenon. However, not all industries are open to lobster. According to the Financial Associated Press,Starting today, a number of brokerages have intensively issued internal compliance reminders or related notices for the "crayfish" OpenClaw.

So far, at least 15 securities firms have made clear requirements.It is strictly prohibited to install, deploy, and use OpenClaw in office/business networks and information systems without permission; if you really need to use it, you must submit it for approval through OA and report relevant information.

Some securities companies have tightened their enforcement, requiring that installation and use be suspended from now on, and installations must be uninstalled immediately. Prevention and control must be implemented when personal computers are connected to the company network. If illegal use of private installation or security incidents occurs, responsibilities will be pursued in accordance with regulations.

The reason for this is that OpenClaw at this stage,It is essentially a semi-finished toy in the hands of geeks, rather than a mature consumer product. Its code is still being rapidly iterated, and the ecosystem is far from mature and full of bugs and uncertainties..

Some users who have experienced it have been caught by this lobster: someone's hard drive was wiped out, someone spent hundreds of dollars overnight, and someone's hard-working project was destroyed.

Today, the industry is gradually tightening the security boundaries of AI tools.Including physical isolation of sensitive systems, minimum permissions, strictly prohibiting access to customer privacy and transaction data, manual final review of key links, strengthening human-machine collaboration and full-process risk control, etc..

It is worth mentioning that yesterday, the People’s Daily and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s Network Security Threat and Vulnerability Information Sharing Platform (NVDB) issued warnings one after another, calling on party and government agencies, enterprises, institutions, and individual users to “use agents such as ‘Lobster’ with caution.”