Bitcoin is down -1.55% in the last 24 hours

Browse through the current market rates for various cryptocurrencies from your dashboard.

Bitmap Copy 3
Bitcoin

BTC

$89,654.95

0.35% 1h

noun-5629767
Max Supply
21,000,000
noun-3235386
Circulating Supply
19,958,253
noun-7899443
Volume

24h

$59,905,494,696.89

3.15% 1h

Shape
Market Dominance
58.70%
Shape
Price Change 90D
-19.28%

Coinbase’s Go-To AI Coding Tool Found Vulnerable to ‘CopyPasta’ Exploit

A new exploit targeting AI coding assistants has raised alarms across the developer community, opening companies such as crypto exchange Coinbase to the risk of potential attacks if extensive safeguards aren’t in place.

Cybersecurity firm HiddenLayer disclosed Thursday that attackers can weaponize a so-called “CopyPasta License Attack” to inject hidden instructions into common developer files.

The exploit primarily affects Cursor, an AI-powered coding tool that Coinbase engineers said in August was among the team’s AI tools. Cursor is said to have been used by “every Coinbase engineer.”

How the attack works

The technique takes advantage of how AI coding assistants treat licensing files as authoritative instructions. By embedding malicious payloads in hidden markdown comments within files such as LICENSE.txt, the exploit convinces the model that these instructions must be preserved and replicated across every file it touches.

Once the AI accepts the “license” as legitimate, it automatically propagates the injected code into new or edited files, spreading without direct user input.

This approach sidesteps traditional malware detection because the malicious commands are disguised as harmless documentation, allowing the virus to spread through an entire codebase without a developer’s knowledge.

In its report, HiddenLayer researchers demonstrated how Cursor could be tricked into adding backdoors, siphoning sensitive data, or running resource-draining commands — all disguised inside seemingly innocuous project files.

“Injected code could stage a backdoor, silently exfiltrate sensitive data or manipulate critical files,” the firm said.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said on Thursday that AI had written up to 40% of the exchange’s code, with a goal of reaching 50% by next month.

However, Armstrong clarified that AI-assisted coding at Coinbase is concentrated in user interface and non-sensitive backends, with “complex and system-critical systems” adopting more slowly.

‘Potentially malicious’

Even so, the optics of a virus targeting Coinbase’s preferred tool amplified industry criticism.

AI prompt injections are not new, but the CopyPasta method advances the threat model by enabling semi-autonomous spread. Instead of targeting a single user, infected files become vectors that compromise every other AI agent that reads them, creating a chain reaction across repositories.

Compared to earlier AI “worm” concepts like Morris II, which hijacked email agents to spam or exfiltrate data, CopyPasta is more insidious because it leverages trusted developer workflows. Instead of requiring user approval or interaction, it embeds itself in files that every coding agent naturally references.

Where Morris II fell short due to human checks on email activity, CopyPasta thrives by hiding inside documentation that developers rarely scrutinize.

Security teams are now urging organizations to scan files for hidden comments and review all AI-generated changes manually.

“All untrusted data entering LLM contexts should be treated as potentially malicious,” HiddenLayer warned, calling for systematic detection before prompt-based attacks scale further.

(CoinDesk has reached out to Coinbase for comments on the attack vector.)

Related Posts

XRP Ledger’s Utility Profile Draws Fresh Attention From Ripple Executive

The XRP Ledger is increasingly framed as purpose-built infrastructure for high-volume financial settlement, signaling its expanding role in...

SEC Crypto Task Force Releases Surveillance Roundtable Agenda

The SEC’s upcoming financial surveillance roundtable spotlights how rapidly evolving crypto privacy tools could reshape oversight while raising...

UAE’s Mashreq Capital Unveils Multi-Asset Fund With Bitcoin Allocation

Mashreq Capital has launched a new multi-asset investment product that provides regulated exposure to Bitcoin ( BTC) for...

Join the Newsletter

noun-7811267

Strong AES 256-bit encryption

noun-7335232

Operating since 2023

noun-7776734

24/7 dedicated client care

Copyright © 2025 by Sable Venture Capital Inc. | All Rights Reserved