openclaw versions <= 2026.3.12 could include raw Telegram bot tokens in media fetch error strings when inbound Telegram media downloads failed.
openclaw (npm)<= 2026.3.122026.3.13The vulnerable path was fetchRemoteMedia() in src/media/fetch.ts. In affected releases, fetch and HTTP error paths embedded the original Telegram file URL into MediaFetchError messages. For Telegram media, those URLs can include /file/bot<TOKEN>/..., so the resulting error strings could leak bot tokens into logs, console output, or any downstream error surface that rendered the exception text.
This issue is in scope under OpenClaw's trust model because the leaked secret is an OpenClaw-operated integration credential, not a user-supplied third-party secret.
[email protected] redacts sensitive media URLs before constructing fetch error messages. Current code routes the source URL and follow-on error paths through redactMediaUrl() / redactSensitiveText(), so Telegram bot tokens are no longer emitted in those error strings.
Regression coverage exists in src/media/fetch.test.ts (redacts Telegram bot tokens from fetch failure messages and redacts Telegram bot tokens from HTTP error messages).
7a53eb7ea8295b08be137e231c9a98c1a79b5cd5Thanks @space08 for reporting.
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