First Seen
Feb 18, 2026
Last Scanned
Feb 22, 2026
Findings
4
Score
55/100
Findings (4)
Detects patterns of downloading and piping to shell execution
curl -fsSL https://cli.inference.sh | sh Download the file first, verify its integrity (checksum, signature), inspect it, then run it. Prefer package managers over raw downloads. Never fetch-and-run in one step.
Likely FP if the target is a well-known installer (e.g., rustup, Homebrew) from its canonical HTTPS domain, though the pattern is inherently risky.
Detects downloading scripts piped directly to a shell interpreter
curl -fsSL https://cli.inference.sh | sh Download the script first, inspect it, verify its checksum, then run it. Do not pipe curl/wget output directly to sh/bash. Prefer package manager installs.
Likely FP if the download is from a well-known installer domain (e.g., brew.sh, rustup.rs), though this pattern is inherently risky even with trusted sources.
Detects autonomous sub-agent or cron-based execution without human oversight
background process + autonomous Remove directives that force the agent to call specific tools or APIs not required for the skill's stated functionality. Tool calls should be determined by user intent, not embedded directives.
Likely FP if the skill legitimately needs to call other tools as part of its workflow (e.g., a deployment skill that calls git and cloud CLI tools).
Detects chained commands using shell operators with dangerous operations
curl -fsSL https://cli.inference.sh | sh Break chained commands into discrete, individually validated steps. Avoid piping untrusted output directly into a shell interpreter.
Likely FP if the matched text is a documentation example showing a common installer one-liner for a well-known tool with a canonical URL.