Florian Holzbauer

2papers

2 Papers

56.7CRMar 17
Malicious Or Not: Adding Repository Context to Agent Skill Classification

Florian Holzbauer, David Schmidt, Gabriel Gegenhuber et al.

Agent skills extend local AI agents, such as Claude Code or Open Claw, with additional functionality, and their popularity has led to the emergence of dedicated skill marketplaces, similar to app stores for mobile applications. Simultaneously, automated skill scanners were introduced, analyzing the skill description available in SKILL.md, to verify their benign behavior. The results for individual market places mark up to 46.8% of skills as malicious. In this paper, we present the largest empirical security analysis of the AI agent skill ecosystem, questioning this high classification of malicious skills. Therefore, we collect 238,180 unique skills from three major distribution platforms and GitHub to systematically analyze their type and behavior. This approach substantially reduces the number of skills flagged as non-benign by security scanners to only 0.52% which remain in malicious flagged repositories. Consequently, out methodology substantially reduces false positives and provides a more robust view of the ecosystem's current risk surface. Beyond that, we extend the security analysis from the mere investigation of the skill description to a comparison of its congruence with the GitHub repository the skill is embedded in, providing additional context. Furthermore, our analysis also uncovers several, by now undocumented real-world attack vectors, namely hijacking skills hosted on abandoned GitHub repositories.

6.3CRApr 14
A Relay a Day Keeps the AirTag Away: Practical Relay Attacks on Apple's AirTags

Gabriel K. Gegenhuber, Leonid Liadveikin, Florian Holzbauer et al.

Apple AirTags use Apple's Find My network: when nearby iDevices detect a lost tag, they anonymously forward an encrypted location report to Apple, which the tag's owner can then fetch to locate the item. That encryption protects privacy -- neither the finder nor Apple learns the owner's identity -- but it also prevents Apple from validating the correctness of received reports. We show that this design weakness can be exploited: using a relay attack, we can inject manipulated location reports so the Find My service reports a false position for a lost AirTag. The same technique can be used to deny recovery of a targeted tag (a focused DoS), since the owner is misled about its whereabouts.