Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    • Social Media Disclaimer
    • DMCA Compliance
    • Anti-Spam Policy
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Tech Chain Daily
    • Home
    • Crypto News
      • Bitcoin
      • Ethereum
      • Altcoins
      • Blockchain
      • DeFi
    • AI News
    • Stock News
    • Learn
      • AI for Beginners
      • AI Tips
      • Make Money with AI
    • Reviews
    • Tools
      • Best AI Tools
      • Crypto Market Cap List
      • Stock Market Overview
      • Market Heatmap
    • Contact
    Tech Chain Daily
    Home»Crypto News»Ethereum»AI Routers Can Steal Credentials and Crypto
    AI Routers Can Steal Credentials and Crypto
    Ethereum

    AI Routers Can Steal Credentials and Crypto

    April 13, 20263 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    changelly


    University of California researchers have discovered that some third-party AI large language model (LLM) routers can pose security vulnerabilities that can lead to crypto theft. 

    A paper measuring malicious intermediary attacks on the LLM supply chain, published on Thursday by the researchers, revealed four attack vectors, including malicious code injection and extraction of credentials. 

    “26 LLM routers are secretly injecting malicious tool calls and stealing creds,” said the paper’s co-author, Chaofan Shou, on X.

    LLM agents increasingly route requests through third-party API intermediaries or routers that aggregate access to providers like OpenAI, Anthropic and Google. However, these routers terminate Internet TLS (Transport Layer Security) connections and have full plaintext access to every message. 

    synthesia

    This means that developers using AI coding agents such as Claude Code to work on smart contracts or wallets could be passing private keys, seed phrases and sensitive data through router infrastructure that has not been screened or secured.

    Multi-hop LLM router supply chain. Source: arXiv.org

    ETH stolen from a decoy crypto wallet 

    The researchers tested 28 paid routers and 400 free routers collected from public communities. 

    Their findings were startling, with nine routers actively injecting malicious code, two deploying adaptive evasion triggers, 17 accessing researcher-owned Amazon Web Services credentials, and one draining Ether (ETH) from a researcher-owned private key.

    Related: Anthropic limits access to AI model over cyberattack concerns

    The researchers prefunded Ethereum wallet “decoy keys” with nominal balances and reported that the value lost in the experiment was below $50, but no further details such as the transaction hash were provided. 

    The authors also ran two “poisoning studies” showing that even benign routers become dangerous once they reuse leaked credentials through weak relays.

    Hard to tell whether routers are malicious

    The researchers said it was not easy to detect when a router was malicious.  

    “The boundary between ‘credential handling’ and ‘credential theft’ is invisible to the client because routers already read secrets in plaintext as part of normal forwarding.” 

    Another unsettling find was what the researchers called “YOLO mode.” This is a setting in many AI agent frameworks where the agent executes commands automatically without asking the user to confirm each one.

    Previously legitimate routers can be silently weaponized without the operator even knowing, while free routers may be stealing credentials while offering cheap API access as the lure, the researchers found.

    “LLM API routers sit on a critical trust boundary that the ecosystem currently treats as transparent transport.” 

    The researchers recommended that developers using AI agents to code should bolster client-side defenses, suggesting never letting private keys or seed phrases transit an AI agent session.

    The long-term fix is for AI companies to cryptographically sign their responses so the instructions an agent executes can be mathematically verified as coming from the actual model. 

    Magazine: Nobody knows if quantum secure cryptography will even work

    Cointelegraph is committed to independent, transparent journalism. This news article is produced in accordance with Cointelegraph’s Editorial Policy and aims to provide accurate and timely information. Readers are encouraged to verify information independently. Read our Editorial Policy https://cointelegraph.com/editorial-policy



    Source link

    notion
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    CryptoExpert
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Arthur Hayes Buys 3,000 ETH Through OTC Deal as On-Chain Data Reveals $5.4M Accumulation

    June 17, 2026

    BitMine Nears 5% of ETH Supply With $10B Holdings Despite Bear Market

    June 16, 2026

    Ethereum Users Can Now Add Quantum-Resistant Account Protection for Just $0.07, Researchers Say

    June 15, 2026

    ETH Futures Bearish, But Staking, Corporate Demand Show Strength

    June 14, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    10web
    Latest Posts

    How to Build Memory-Efficient Transformers with xFormers Using Packed Sequences, GQA, ALiBi, SwiGLU, and Causal Attention

    June 17, 2026

    Generative AI vs Agentic AI vs AI Agents

    June 16, 2026

    Charles Hoskinson Reveals What Happened to 1,096 BTC From Cardano’s Early Days

    June 16, 2026

    Strategy bought $100 million more Bitcoin but critics say MSTR shareholders now own less of it

    June 16, 2026

    BitMine ETH Holdings Reach $10B, Now 4.66% of Circulating Supply

    June 16, 2026
    synthesia
    LEGAL INFORMATION
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    • Social Media Disclaimer
    • DMCA Compliance
    • Anti-Spam Policy
    Top Insights

    Bitcoin Rallies To $67K As US-Iran Make Peace: Will Both Hold?

    June 17, 2026

    Binance Faces Reported MiCA Setback In Greece Ahead Of July Deadline

    June 17, 2026
    aistudios
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    © 2026 TechChainDaily.com - All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.