Attack HIGH relevance

Compatibility at a Cost: Systematic Discovery and Exploitation of MCP Clause-Compliance Vulnerabilities

Nanzi Yang Weiheng Bai Kangjie Lu
Published
March 10, 2026
Updated
March 10, 2026

Abstract

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is a recently proposed interoperability standard that unifies how AI agents connect with external tools and data sources. By defining a set of common client-server message exchange clauses, MCP replaces fragmented integrations with a standardized, plug-and-play framework. However, to be compatible with diverse AI agents, the MCP specification relaxes many behavioral constraints into optional clauses, leading to misuse-prone SDK implementation. We identify it as a new attack surface that allows adversaries to achieve multiple attacks (e.g, silent prompt injection, DoS, etc.), named as \emph{compatibility-abusing attacks}. In this work, we present the first systematic framework for analyzing this new attack surface across multi-language MCP SDKs. First, we construct a universal and language-agnostic intermediate representation (IR) generator that normalizes SDKs of different languages. Next, based on the new IR, we propose auditable static analysis with LLM-guided semantic reasoning for cross-language/clause compliance analysis. Third, by formalizing the attack semantics of the MCP clauses, we build three attack modalities and develop a modality-guided pipeline to uncover exploitable non-compliance issues.

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