AI agents call find_license_violations to retrieve information from Orihime without modifying anything — typically the context-gathering step in research, monitoring, and reporting workflows, before the agent takes action elsewhere.
This tool retrieves or reports license compliance violations by analyzing the embedded KuzuDB code index. It produces informational output (violations found) without creating, modifying, executing, or deleting data. While the description is empty, the name and server context (code knowledge graph analysis) strongly suggest a Read operation.
From the tool's definition Tool name 'find_license_violations' indicates querying/scanning for license compliance issues across the indexed code knowledge graph.
Attacks that exploit this kind of access
find_license_violations. It is categorised as a Read tool in the Orihime MCP Server, which means it retrieves data without modifying state.
Register the Orihime MCP server in PolicyLayer and add a rule for find_license_violations: allow, deny, rate-limit, or require approval. Point your MCP client at the PolicyLayer proxy URL and the rule is enforced on every call, before it reaches Orihime. Nothing to install.
find_license_violations is a Read tool with low risk. Read-only tools are generally safe to allow by default.
Yes. Add a rate_limit block to the find_license_violations rule in your PolicyLayer policy. For example, setting max: 10 and window: 60 limits the tool to 10 calls per minute. Rate limits are tracked per agent session and reset automatically.
Set action: deny in the PolicyLayer policy for find_license_violations. The AI agent will receive a policy violation error and cannot call the tool. You can also include a reason field to explain why the tool is blocked.
find_license_violations is provided by the Orihime MCP server (srinivasan-sundaresan95/orihime). PolicyLayer sits as a proxy in front of this server to enforce policies before tool calls reach the server.
Every MCP server has a record like this.
Type a name, get the same breakdown: verified identity, auth posture, risk grade, capabilities, recommended policy.
Teams ship this data inside their own products. See what a licence covers →