Enterprise ZDR User Reports Cross-Session Cache Leak
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- The Enterprise ZDR user reported the agent abruptly asking what kind of bricks they wanted for a Minecraft temple, despite that topic never being part of their actual task or session.
- The agent also confidently asserted in its recap that it was building a Minecraft temple, a claim the user says reflected none of the work actually being done.
- The user floated two explanations for the leak — either another colleague's workspace session bled into theirs, or content from a consumer-plan account surfaced in an enterprise session — both of which they described as serious trust concerns.
- The report was filed from Darwin via Apple Terminal on version 2.1.199, tagged with Feedback ID f336f5d2-3992-4a04-9e1f-ec30f006f75e.
- The user explicitly distinguished the Minecraft leakage from a separate, self-infected 'earlier pollution' issue caused by a .claude directory in a different working directory, calling the two unrelated.
Why it matters: If cache is not actually isolated per workspace, the Enterprise ZDR promise that justifies the tier's premium pricing collapses — a single leaked prompt from an unrelated account could expose any customer's sensitive chat sessions, turning a one-off bug into a tier-wide trust problem that enterprises evaluate against zero-retention competitors.




