Edamame, a France-based company, has introduced a runtime security system to detect code drift and attack patterns in AI coding agents before they silently diverge from developer intent. The solution targets credential theft, token exfiltration, and supply-chain threats affecting developer workstations and named tools like Cursor, Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Codex, and OpenClaw. #Edamame #Cursor #ClaudeDesktop #ClaudeCode #Codex #OpenClaw #Axios #npm #PyPI
Keypoints
- AI coding agents can drift from the developerβs intended actions.
- Code drift may expose tokens, SSH keys, source code, and wallet material.
- Edamame offers runtime verification and attack-pattern detection for coding agents.
- The system combines host telemetry with agent signals to spot divergence and suspicious behavior.
- It can detect supply-chain attacks such as npm and PyPI threats on developer workstations.