The paper presents OverEager-Gen, a 500-scenario benchmark showing that removing consent declarations from prompts increases overeager actions by 11.9-17.2 percentage points across models, with agent framework choice dominating base-model effects.
Measuring the Permission Gate: A Stress-Test Evaluation of Claude Code's Auto Mode
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Claude Code's auto mode is the first deployed permission system for AI coding agents, using a two-stage transcript classifier to gate dangerous tool calls. Anthropic reports a 0.4% false positive rate and 17% false negative rate on production traffic. We present the first independent evaluation of this system on deliberately ambiguous authorization scenarios, i.e., tasks where the user's intent is clear but the target scope, blast radius, or risk level is underspecified. Using AmPermBench, a 128-prompt benchmark spanning four DevOps task families and three controlled ambiguity axes, we evaluate 253 state-changing actions at the individual action level against oracle ground truth. Our findings characterize auto mode's scope-escalation coverage under this stress-test workload. The end-to-end false negative rate is 81.0% (95% CI: 73.8%-87.4%), substantially higher than the 17% reported on production traffic, reflecting a fundamentally different workload rather than a contradiction. Notably, 36.8% of all state-changing actions fall outside the classifier's scope via Tier 2 (in-project file edits), contributing to the elevated end-to-end FNR. Even restricting to the 160 actions the classifier actually evaluates (Tier 3), the FNR remains 70.3%, while the FPR rises to 31.9%. The Tier 2 coverage gap is most pronounced on artifact cleanup (92.9% FNR), where agents naturally fall back to editing state files when the expected CLI is unavailable. These results highlight a coverage boundary worth examining: auto mode assumes dangerous actions transit the shell, but agents routinely achieve equivalent effects through file edits that the classifier does not evaluate.
fields
cs.SE 2years
2026 2representative citing papers
Agentic Agile-V uses Agile-V as backbone and a Specify-Constrain-Orchestrate-Prove-Evolve-Verify loop to convert AI agent conversations into traceable engineering artifacts with acceptance evidence.
citing papers explorer
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Overeager Coding Agents: Measuring Out-of-Scope Actions on Benign Tasks
The paper presents OverEager-Gen, a 500-scenario benchmark showing that removing consent declarations from prompts increases overeager actions by 11.9-17.2 percentage points across models, with agent framework choice dominating base-model effects.
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Agentic Agile-V: From Vibe Coding to Verified Engineering in Software and Hardware Development
Agentic Agile-V uses Agile-V as backbone and a Specify-Constrain-Orchestrate-Prove-Evolve-Verify loop to convert AI agent conversations into traceable engineering artifacts with acceptance evidence.