Gate News reports that on March 17, the National Security Department’s official account released the “Lobster” (OpenClaw) Safe Farming Manual. The manual states that there are four major security risks in farming “Lobster”: the main system could be hijacked, data could be stolen, speech could be tampered with, and technical vulnerabilities may exist. The security guidelines recommend checking the following issues: whether the control interface is exposed to the public internet, whether permissions are overly broad, whether stored credentials have been leaked, and whether the installed plugins come from trusted sources. The manual emphasizes the need to follow the principle of least privilege, strictly limit the scope of agent operations; for serious security risks, immediate measures such as isolation or taking the system offline should be implemented.