Terminal-based coding assistants for AI-curious developers are hot these days, and the most popular choice appears to be Claude Code . But Anthropic’s commercial offering has a new open source rival: MiMo Code , released under an MIT license by Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi. Unlike Claude Code, MiMo Code is not restricted to a specific LLM provider. It was also optimized for “long-horizon automated programming tasks,” according to the introductory blog entry . The software aims to “maintain decision quality and state continuity over dozens or even hundreds of execution steps.” The AI community has taken notice of this release. Since its v0.1 release last week, MiMo Code has garnered 9,000 stars on GitHub , and has been forked 783 times. And unlike Claude Code, which costs $20 a month to start, MiMo is free, and may not even require connecting to a cloud provider, if the user installs a model on their own machine. Tackling Long Horizon Memory Retention Large Language Models (...
AI coding agents can create a new code execution risk when they treat externally influenced error data as trusted guidance and have access to command line tools, according to new research from Tenet Security. The security company demonstrated an indirect prompt injection technique it calls “Agentjacking” in a recent report . In its proof of concept, an attacker planted malicious instructions inside a fake Sentry error report, causing an AI coding agent to execute an attacker-supplied command during a routine debugging task. The attack began with a Sentry Data Source Name (DSN), a credential commonly embedded in a website’s frontend JavaScript. Sentry treats DSNs as public and write-only because they allow applications to submit events without granting access to the project or its existing data. But an attacker who obtains the DSN can use it to send a false error event to the project’s ingest endpoint and control fields, including the error message, stack trace, tags, context and brea...