BytePlusCDN

Security checks across malware telemetry and agentic risk

Overview

This is a disclosed BytePlus CDN administration skill with real operational power, but the reviewed artifacts do not show hidden, deceptive, or unrelated behavior.

Install only if you intend to let an agent manage BytePlus CDN resources. Use least-privilege, dedicated credentials; verify domains, purge/preload targets, and log destinations before running commands; avoid using "all" unless intended; and do not print or paste service-account JSON in terminals or CI logs.

SkillSpector

By NVIDIA
Vulnerability Patterns
  • Data ExfiltrationExternal Transmission, Env Variable Harvesting, File System Enumeration
  • Prompt InjectionInstruction Override, Hidden Instructions, Exfiltration Commands
  • Privilege EscalationExcessive Permissions, Sudo/Root Execution, Credential Access
  • Supply ChainUnpinned Dependencies, External Script Fetching, Obfuscated Code
  • Excessive AgencyUnrestricted Tool Access, Autonomous Decision Making, Scope Creep
Findings (3)

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
92% confidence
Finding
The skill documents delivery of CDN logs to TOS, S3, TLS, SLS, HTTP servers, Splunk, and BigQuery without prominently warning that these logs may contain sensitive operational metadata such as domains, URLs, client/request patterns, and other potentially regulated telemetry. This is dangerous because users may configure exfiltration of production log data to third-party or externally managed systems without understanding the privacy, compliance, and exposure implications.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
93% confidence
Finding
The documentation instructs users to place long-lived access credentials in a project-local `.env` file and environment variables without any warning about secrecy, file permissions, exclusion from version control, or use of safer secret-management mechanisms. In a skill specifically for CDN administration, these credentials likely grant sensitive control over domains, cache operations, and log delivery, so poor credential-handling guidance materially increases the risk of accidental disclosure and account compromise.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
93% confidence
Finding
When no output file is provided, the script prints the escaped credential JSON directly to stdout, which can expose secrets through terminal logs, CI job logs, shell history, scrollback, or copy/paste mistakes. In a skill that may be used operationally, this increases the chance that long-lived credentials are unintentionally disclosed even without an external attacker actively exploiting the script.

VirusTotal

65/65 vendors flagged this skill as clean.

View on VirusTotal