NanoClaw and JFrog launch 'immune system' to block AI agents from downloading malicious code

1 hour ago 1
Add to circle

The creators of the hit, enterprise-friendly, open source OpenClaw variant NanoClaw are partnering with software supply chain management leader JFrog have to launch a new, joint security integration they say will protect NanoClaw autonomous agents from malicious code injection.

"These agents are doing things that you cannot necessarily control, and you cannot necessarily train," said Gal Marder, Chief Strategy Officer at JFrog, in an exclusive interview with VentureBeat.

Available immediately, the partnership hardwires NanoClaw agents directly to JFrog’s vetted software registries, ensuring that AI assistants can only pull scanned, safe dependencies.

The release addresses a rapidly growing blind spot in tech: autonomous agents frequently install packages in the background to extend their capabilities, often without their human operators' knowledge or oversight.

"The people who are operating the agents are not necessarily developers, and they are not even aware of the implications," explained Gavriel Cohen, creator of NanoClaw and CEO and co-founder of its new commercial services startup, NanoCo AI.

To secure the broader ecosystem, the integration is available completely free of charge for the open-source community, while enterprise organizations can seamlessly route their agents through their existing, commercially licensed JFrog environments.

The new technical capability enabled by this partnership follows NanoCo's moves to add permissions dialogs across the apps in which it's available via a partnership with Vercel, and a new partnership with Docker to allow NanoClaw agents to run more securely, isolated from other software environments directly inside Docker virtual containers.

The risk of current, personal autonomous AI agents

When an operator interacts with an autonomous system like NanoCo's NanoClaw, they communicate at a high level of abstraction.

A user might simply send an audio file or a voice note, prompting the agent to independently figure out how to process it.

As Cohen explained, the agent thinks, "oh, I can't understand voice notes, so let me go and grab a package and download something and install it and set it up and run it".

This dynamic self-improvement makes AI agents incredibly powerful, but it also renders them highly susceptible to software supply chain attacks.

Bad actors are increasingly poisoning open-source registries with malicious packages. Because agents act autonomously to fetch what they need, they bypass human scrutiny.

The operators, who may not even be developers, are largely unaware of the security implications unfolding behind the scenes.

How NanoCo and JFrog are working to stop agents from running malicious code

The integration between NanoCo and JFrog acts as an automated immune system for these AI environments.

Under the hood, NanoClaw agents are now configured to route their requests for software packages, CLI tools, and Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers exclusively through JFrog’s registries.

If an agent attempts to download a compromised library—such as a vulnerable version of the popular Axios package—the JFrog registry intercepts the request.

It blocks the installation, returning a security policy error to the agent, noting that the request was "rejected by JFrog's registry with a 403 security policy".

Crucially, the system does not just stop at blocking the threat; it creates a dynamic correction loop. The agent is notified of the vulnerability and guided to automatically seek out and install an approved, non-malicious version of the requested package instead.

For large organizations, this integration solves a massive compliance headache. Marder notes that as enterprises adopt autonomous agents, they require absolute visibility.

Organizations need "a system of record, we need somewhere to track what agents that's running by whom and consuming what packages and using what skills and using what MCPs," he told VentureBeat.

Beyond visibility, the JFrog integration provides a foundational "trust layer" and strict governance over what these automated systems are permitted to access.

Licensing and accessibility

In the realm of software distribution, licensing and access parameters dictate adoption. The NanoCo and JFrog partnership utilizes a dual-track approach to serve both individual open-source developers and highly regulated enterprises.

For the open-source community, the integration is completely free. JFrog is providing open-source NanoClaw users with complimentary access to safe, vetted sources of artifacts, tools, and skills.

This allows individual developers to run autonomous agents locally without drowning in manual approval requests for every single dependency. Furthermore, as community members build and share new "skills" for the agents, these contributions are uploaded to the registry, scanned for malicious code, and cleared before anyone else can use them.

This infrastructure directly neutralizes the threat of poisoned community repositories.

For enterprise deployments, the architecture plugs seamlessly into an organization's existing commercial environment. Rather than using the public open-source registry, corporate users point their NanoClaw agents to their own internal JFrog registries.

This ensures that all agent activity adheres to the company’s specific commercial licenses, internal security policies, visibility needs, and governance standards.

As AI continues to blur the line between human intent and machine execution, the infrastructure securing that execution must evolve. This partnership acknowledges a core reality: you cannot train an AI to perfectly recognize every zero-day vulnerability; instead, you must build an environment where the agent simply cannot reach the vulnerability in the first place.

Read Entire Article