Anthropic PBC is taking the leash off its popular artificial intelligence coding tool Claude Code, introducing a new feature called “auto mode” that lets it decide for itself which permissions it’s ...
Six teams exploited Claude Code, Copilot, Codex, and Vertex AI in nine months. Every attack hit runtime credentials that IAM tools never tracked.
Claude's auto mode reduces permission prompts for developers. AI classifier blocks risky commands, such as mass file deletion. It's a middle ground between safety controls and full autonomy Anthropic ...
Auto mode for Claude is designed to approve safe actions and only seek permission for risky actions Anthropic knows developers have been skipping permissions altogether Research preview 'auto mode' ...
Anthropic continues to ship in March with a new “auto mode” permissions mode in Claude Code. The company calls it a middle ground between the default configuration and skipping permissions altogether.
Once again, you probably shouldn’t do this, but I’m one of those sickos running Claude with --dangerously-skip-permissions enabled at all times because the whole point of an agent is to do things on ...
Many users of Claude Code may not realize they are only scratching the surface of its capabilities. As Simon Scrapes highlights, the platform offers far more than basic automation, with features like ...
Anthropic accidentally published 512,000 lines of Claude Code's proprietary source code through a debug file bundled into a routine npm update on March 31. The leak exposed the full architecture of ...
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