<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>GRID THE GREY — AI Threat Intelligence | GRID THE GREY</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/</link><description>Real-time AI security intelligence — adversarial ML, LLM vulnerabilities, and supply chain threats mapped to MITRE ATLAS and OWASP LLM Top 10.</description><generator>Hugo</generator><language>en-us</language><copyright/><lastBuildDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 10:06:41 +0530</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://gridthegrey.com/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>Legacy Infrastructure Becomes Primary Attack Path into Enterprise AI Agents</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/legacy-infrastructure-becomes-primary-attack-path-into-enterprise-ai-agents/</link><pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 04:36:27 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/legacy-infrastructure-becomes-primary-attack-path-into-enterprise-ai-agents/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>Attackers are bypassing AI-layer defences entirely by exploiting unpatched legacy infrastructure — misconfigured Active Directory, stale credentials, and over-privileged IAM roles — to hijack the resources AI agents depend on. Research cited in the article shows 70% of organisations grant AI systems more access than a human in the same role, driving a 76% incident rate among over-privileged deployments. The article argues that securing AI agents requires closing the underlying infrastructure exposure gap, not just hardening the model layer.</description></item><item><title>Role Confusion Attack Lets Injected Text Override LLM Safety Controls</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/role-confusion-attack-lets-injected-text-override-llm-safety-controls/</link><pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 04:35:39 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/role-confusion-attack-lets-injected-text-override-llm-safety-controls/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>Adversarial ML</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0015 - Evade ML Model</category><description>New research from Ye, Cui, and Hadfield-Menell demonstrates that LLMs prioritise the stylistic format of text over its structural role tags, enabling attackers to craft injected content that mimics internal reasoning blocks and bypasses safety guardrails. The study found attack success rates of 61% when injected text stylistically matched model-internal formats, dropping to just 10% after 'destyling'. The authors conclude that without genuine role perception in models, prompt injection defences will remain fundamentally reactive.</description></item><item><title>First Look: OpenAI Launches 'Patch the Planet' Open-Source Vulnerability Remediation Initiative</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-launches-patch-the-planet-open-source-vulnerability-initiative/</link><pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 04:34:36 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-launches-patch-the-planet-open-source-vulnerability-initiative/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0020 - Poison Training Data</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>OpenAI has partnered with Trail of Bits to launch 'Patch the Planet,' an initiative using AI-assisted tooling (including Codex Security) to help open-source maintainers find and patch vulnerabilities at scale. While the defensive intent is clear, the program introduces new attack surface considerations: AI-generated patches applied to widely-used open-source projects create a high-value supply chain target, and the triage/remediation pipeline itself could be manipulated to introduce subtle flaws. Defenders should monitor open-source dependencies that receive AI-assisted patches and assess the integrity guarantees of the remediation workflow.</description></item><item><title>AutoJack Vulnerability Chain Enabled Remote Code Execution via AI Agent WebSocket</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/autojack-vulnerability-chain-enabled-remote-code-execution-via-ai-agent/</link><pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 04:33:34 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/autojack-vulnerability-chain-enabled-remote-code-execution-via-ai-agent/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>A three-flaw vulnerability chain dubbed AutoJack in Microsoft's AutoGen Studio allowed attackers to execute arbitrary commands on a developer's host system by manipulating a browsing AI agent into connecting to a malicious webpage. The attack exploited missing authentication on MCP WebSocket routes combined with unsanitised base64-encoded parameters to launch arbitrary processes. Microsoft confirmed the flaw was patched before any PyPI release, limiting exposure to developers building directly from the main GitHub branch.</description></item><item><title>First Look: AWS Launches Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Payments Enabling Autonomous Agent Transactions</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-launches-amazon-bedrock-agentcore-payments-enabling-autonomous/</link><pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 04:32:37 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-launches-amazon-bedrock-agentcore-payments-enabling-autonomous/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>AWS has launched Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Payments, a managed infrastructure layer that enables AI agents to autonomously transact with external model providers and services using the x402 payment protocol, without human intervention. This capability introduces a new class of financial attack surface where compromised or manipulated agents can autonomously spend real funds, exfiltrate value, or be redirected to malicious service endpoints. Defenders must now treat agent payment credentials and spending budgets as first-class financial controls, on par with cloud IAM policies.</description></item><item><title>First Look: OpenAI ChatGPT Image Generator Bypasses Content Filters via Viral Prompt</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-chatgpt-image-generator-bypasses-content-filters-via-viral/</link><pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2026 05:19:54 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-chatgpt-image-generator-bypasses-content-filters-via-viral/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Adversarial ML</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0015 - Evade ML Model</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><description>Mindgard researchers demonstrated that ChatGPT's image generation pipeline can be manipulated through an indirect, socially-engineered prompt to produce violent and sexually explicit content without users directly requesting it, exposing a significant failure in OpenAI's content moderation controls. Defenders and enterprise operators of ChatGPT-integrated products face a newly validated attack class where innocuous-looking prompt patterns — potentially spreading virally — can systematically strip safety guardrails from image generation. This finding signals that content filter bypasses in multimodal systems are reproducible at scale, raising urgent questions about the adequacy of output-layer filtering as a sole defence mechanism.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Bayer and Thoughtworks Ship PRINCE Agentic RAG Platform for Pharmaceutical Research</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-bayer-and-thoughtworks-ship-prince-agentic-rag-platform-for-research/</link><pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2026 05:14:20 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-bayer-and-thoughtworks-ship-prince-agentic-rag-platform-for-research/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><description>Bayer AG and Thoughtworks have published a detailed case study on PRINCE, a production agentic RAG system combining multi-agent orchestration, Text-to-SQL, and human-in-the-loop workflows to answer complex pharmaceutical preclinical research questions and draft regulatory documents. The system's architecture — spanning intent clarification, planning, retrieval, reflection, and writing agents with access to decades of safety study data — introduces a broad attack surface including prompt injection across agent boundaries, SQL injection via natural language, and sensitive data exfiltration through compromised agent outputs. Defenders evaluating similar agentic platforms should treat each inter-agent handoff as a trust boundary requiring independent validation and focus on data leakage controls given the sensitivity of preclinical regulatory data.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Anthropic Claude Code Gains Fully-Local Persistent Session Memory via Recall</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-claude-code-gains-fully-local-persistent-session-memory-via/</link><pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2026 05:12:25 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-claude-code-gains-fully-local-persistent-session-memory-via/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><description>Recall is an open-source, fully-local memory layer for Anthropic's Claude Code that persists and summarises project context across coding sessions without sending data to external services. For defenders, the introduction of a persistent, file-based context store creates a new attack surface: a poisoned or tampered memory file can silently inject malicious instructions into every subsequent Claude Code session. Security teams should treat the local memory store as a trusted-input boundary and apply appropriate file-integrity and access controls.</description></item><item><title>First Look: OpenAI Ships GPT-5.5 Instant with Enhanced Health Intelligence in ChatGPT</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-ships-gpt-5-5-instant-with-enhanced-health-intelligence-in/</link><pubDate>Sun, 21 Jun 2026 09:10:25 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-ships-gpt-5-5-instant-with-enhanced-health-intelligence-in/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><description>OpenAI has upgraded ChatGPT's health and wellness response capabilities via GPT-5.5 Instant, incorporating stronger reasoning, physician-informed evaluations, and improved contextual understanding for medical queries. This expansion into high-stakes health guidance raises meaningful concerns for defenders, as improved fluency and authority in medical responses increases the risk of user overreliance and lowers the perceived threshold for trusting AI-generated health advice. Security and trust-safety teams should evaluate how this capability interacts with prompt injection, social engineering chains, and the broader risk of AI-mediated medical misinformation at scale.</description></item><item><title>Malware Embeds Policy-Triggering Text to Evade LLM-Based Security Analysis</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/malware-embeds-policy-triggering-text-to-evade-llm-based-security-analysis/</link><pubDate>Sun, 21 Jun 2026 09:09:14 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/malware-embeds-policy-triggering-text-to-evade-llm-based-security-analysis/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Adversarial ML</category><category>First Look</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0015 - Evade ML Model</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><description>A malware developer has been observed embedding fake system instructions and policy-triggering content — including references to nuclear and biological weapons — inside JavaScript comment blocks to confuse or trigger refusal behaviour in LLM-powered security analysis pipelines. The technique does not affect code execution but is specifically designed to disrupt naive AI-first triage tools that feed raw file content to language models without isolating it as untrusted data. Traditional static analysis methods remain unaffected, but the approach signals an emerging class of anti-AI-analysis evasion techniques.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Agentic AI Security Platforms Emerge Promising Autonomous CTEM Operationalization</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-agentic-ai-security-platforms-emerge-promising-autonomous-ctem/</link><pubDate>Sun, 21 Jun 2026 09:05:17 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-agentic-ai-security-platforms-emerge-promising-autonomous-ctem/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0020 - Poison Training Data</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><description>A new class of agentic AI security platforms is emerging that autonomously correlates threat intelligence, validates controls, and prioritizes remediations across siloed enterprise security tooling — moving beyond assistive chatbot interfaces to continuous, multi-step autonomous action. This shift introduces significant new attack surface: an AI system with persistent access to live exposure data, security telemetry, and remediation workflows becomes a high-value target for adversarial manipulation. Defenders must assess trust boundaries, prompt injection risks, and the consequences of autonomous action taken on poisoned or manipulated inputs before deploying these systems.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Token Security Launches AI Agent Identity Governance Platform for Enterprise</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-token-security-launches-ai-agent-identity-governance-platform-for/</link><pubDate>Sat, 20 Jun 2026 04:35:56 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-token-security-launches-ai-agent-identity-governance-platform-for/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>Token Security has published analysis and launched a platform addressing the growing security gap created by AI agents operating as unmanaged identities within enterprise environments, connecting to critical systems like Salesforce, GitHub, Snowflake, and production databases with minimal governance. Most organizations have deployed AI agents using credentials provisioned for other purposes, creating high-privilege, low-visibility actors outside the scope of existing IAM controls. Defenders now face a sprawling, machine-speed identity layer that existing lifecycle management, least-privilege enforcement, and audit tooling were never designed to handle.</description></item><item><title>First Look: GitHub Ships Internal Data Analytics Agent Built on Copilot</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-github-ships-internal-data-analytics-agent-built-on-copilot/</link><pubDate>Sat, 20 Jun 2026 04:34:14 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-github-ships-internal-data-analytics-agent-built-on-copilot/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>GitHub has published a detailed engineering account of how it built an internal data analytics agent using GitHub Copilot, exposing the architectural patterns — including natural language-to-SQL translation, autonomous tool invocation, and internal data access — that underpin such systems. For defenders, this blueprint highlights concrete risks around prompt injection into analytics pipelines, excessive agency over sensitive internal datasets, and the challenge of auditing LLM-generated queries before execution. Organisations adopting similar agentic analytics patterns should treat this as a reference threat model rather than a safe-to-copy architecture.</description></item><item><title>AutoJack Exploit Chain Turns AI Browsing Agent Into Remote Code Execution Vector</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/autojack-exploit-chain-turns-ai-browsing-agent-into-remote-code-execution-vector/</link><pubDate>Sat, 20 Jun 2026 04:32:27 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/autojack-exploit-chain-turns-ai-browsing-agent-into-remote-code-execution-vector/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Microsoft researchers disclosed AutoJack, an exploit chain targeting AutoGen Studio's MCP WebSocket endpoint that allows a single malicious web page to execute arbitrary commands on a developer's host machine via an AI browsing agent. The attack chains three distinct weaknesses — localhost trust bypass, missing authentication on MCP paths, and unsanitised command execution — requiring no credentials or user interaction beyond the agent loading the attacker's URL. While the vulnerable handler was not included in stable PyPI releases, it shipped in two pre-release builds that remain unyanked, leaving anyone who installed those versions exposed.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Delphi Powers Kē App's AI Celebrity Clone for Wellness Coaching</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-delphi-powers-ke-app-s-ai-celebrity-clone-for-wellness-coaching/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 07:57:43 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-delphi-powers-ke-app-s-ai-celebrity-clone-for-wellness-coaching/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0020 - Poison Training Data</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>Karamo Brown's Kē wellness app deploys an AI digital clone of the celebrity — voice, persona, and advisory content — built by Delphi from interviews, podcasts, and public clips, enabling real-time conversational coaching at scale. For defenders, celebrity-clone architectures introduce layered risks: the training corpus is largely public and manipulable, the voice synthesis surface is exploitable for deepfake derivation, and the mental-health context creates elevated harm potential if the persona is hijacked or jailbroken. Security teams evaluating similar deployments should treat the persona boundary as a primary control point, since users in vulnerable emotional states are disproportionately exposed to manipulation if guardrails fail.</description></item><item><title>First Look: AWS SageMaker Ships 100+ Detailed Inference Metrics with CloudWatch Insights Dashboard</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-sagemaker-ships-100-detailed-inference-metrics-with-cloudwatch/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 07:56:59 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-sagemaker-ships-100-detailed-inference-metrics-with-cloudwatch/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><description>AWS has released a deep observability layer for SageMaker AI inference endpoints, emitting over 100 metrics covering GPU health, KV cache pressure, token-level latency, and traffic distribution into a native CloudWatch Insights dashboard with PromQL-compatible export. For defenders, this centralised telemetry surface introduces new reconnaissance and exfiltration vectors: an adversary with read access to CloudWatch or connected third-party tools (Grafana, Datadog) can infer model architecture, request patterns, and capacity limits without touching the model itself. The richness of these signals also raises insider-threat risk, as operational staff now have granular visibility into inference behaviour that can be leveraged to reverse-engineer model characteristics or plan targeted denial-of-service campaigns.</description></item><item><title>First Look: AWS Launches Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Harness for Production-Grade Agents</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-launches-amazon-bedrock-agentcore-harness-for-production-grade/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 07:54:42 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-launches-amazon-bedrock-agentcore-harness-for-production-grade/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><description>AWS has made Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Harness generally available, providing a managed abstraction layer that reduces agent deployment to two API calls while bundling sandboxed compute, persistent memory, tool gateway, browser access, identity management, and observability. For defenders, this dramatically lowers the barrier to deploying autonomous agents with filesystem access, shell execution, web browsing, and multi-provider model switching — compressing what was a weeks-long infrastructure project into minutes. Security teams face an expanded attack surface where prompt injection, tool abuse, cross-session memory poisoning, and supply chain risks through AWS-curated skill catalogs now arrive as a single, tightly integrated managed service rather than individually reviewable components.</description></item><item><title>AutoJack Exploit Chain Achieves RCE via AI Agent Browsing Local MCP Socket</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/autojack-exploit-chain-achieves-rce-via-ai-agent-browsing-local-mcp-socket/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 07:44:15 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/autojack-exploit-chain-achieves-rce-via-ai-agent-browsing-local-mcp-socket/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Research</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>Researchers at Microsoft identified a three-stage exploit chain in AutoGen Studio that allows a malicious web page visited by a browsing AI agent to reach the host's local Model Context Protocol (MCP) WebSocket and spawn arbitrary processes. The chain exploits a bypassable origin allowlist, authentication middleware that excluded MCP endpoints, and unsanitised URL-derived command parameters. Although the vulnerable surface was never shipped in a PyPI release, the finding exposes a systemic architectural risk in any agent framework that combines untrusted browsing with privileged localhost services.</description></item><item><title>Orphaned AI Agents Retain Privileged Access After Employee Departures</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/orphaned-ai-agents-retain-privileged-access-after-employee-departures/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2026 07:41:47 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/orphaned-ai-agents-retain-privileged-access-after-employee-departures/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Enterprises deploying internal AI agents face a growing identity accountability gap: when the employee who created an autonomous agent leaves, the agent's access tokens and credentials often remain active and unmonitored. Traditional access management tools fail to detect this risk because they treat AI agents as static software rather than identity-bearing entities capable of exfiltrating sensitive data. The problem compounds at scale as shadow AI deployments proliferate across organizations without centralised visibility or ownership tracking.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Anthropic Mythos 5 Export Block Exposes AI Supply Chain Dependency Risk</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-mythos-5-export-block-exposes-ai-supply-chain-dependency/</link><pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2026 04:28:40 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-mythos-5-export-block-exposes-ai-supply-chain-dependency/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>Industry News</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0015 - Evade ML Model</category><category>AML.T0031 - Erode ML Model Integrity</category><description>The Trump administration's overnight export block of Anthropic's Mythos 5 and Fable 5 models — triggered by reported safety guardrail bypass vulnerabilities flagged by Amazon — has exposed the fragility of international AI supply chains built on U.S.-controlled infrastructure. For defenders, this event crystallises a critical dependency risk: organisations and governments that have embedded American AI models into critical systems now face the possibility of abrupt, unexplained access revocation with no remediation path. Security teams must now treat AI vendor access continuity as a threat vector equivalent to a third-party SaaS outage, and accelerate contingency planning around model substitution and sovereign alternatives.</description></item></channel></rss>