AI agents are now being weaponized through prompt injection, exposing why model guardrails are not enough to protect ...
Security leaders must adapt large language model controls such as input validation, output filtering and least-privilege access for artificial intelligence systems to prevent prompt injection attacks.
A prompt injection attack hit Claude Code, Gemini CLI, and Copilot simultaneously. Here's what all three system cards reveal — and don't — about agent runtime protection.
Today’s AI models suffer from a critical flaw. They lack human judgment and context that makes them vulnerable to what security researchers call “prompt injection attacks.” What are prompt injection ...
Even as OpenAI works to harden its Atlas AI browser against cyberattacks, the company admits that prompt injections, a type of attack that manipulates AI agents to follow malicious instructions often ...
Grok AI was tricked by Morse code into helping drain nearly $200K in crypto. The Bankrbot exploit shows how fragile ...
Researchers discover Gemini AI prompt injection via Google Calendar invites Attackers could exfiltrate private meeting data with minimal user interaction Vulnerability has been mitigated, reducing ...
Read more about Agentic AI red teaming could become essential for securing future AI systems: Here's why on Devdiscourse ...
Artificial intelligence guardrail and monitoring startup Pumpkin Intelligence Inc., which operates as White Circle, announced ...
Companies like OpenAI, Perplexity, and The Browser Company are in a race to build AI browsers that can do more than just display webpages. It feels similar to the first browser wars that gave us ...
OpenAI's new ChatGPT Atlas web browser has a security flaw that lets attackers execute prompt injection attacks by disguising malicious instructions as URLs. The AI security firm NeuralTrust says the ...
Bruce Schneier and Barath Raghavan explore why LLMs struggle with context and judgment and, consequently, are vulnerable to prompt injection attacks. These 'attacks' are cases where LLMs are tricked ...