<?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>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 17:58:20 +0530</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://gridthegrey.com/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>First Look: Chinese AI Firms Launch LLMs Rivalling US Frontier Models in Capability</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-chinese-ai-firms-launch-llms-rivalling-us-frontier-models-in/</link><pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 10:53:05 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-chinese-ai-firms-launch-llms-rivalling-us-frontier-models-in/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><description>Two newly released large language models from Chinese AI firms have reached capability parity with leading US frontier models, expanding the global pool of powerful AI available to both commercial and adversarial users. For defenders, this development broadens the asymmetry between attackers — who gain access to capable, potentially less-restricted models — and defenders, who must now account for threats generated by a wider set of model providers. Security teams should anticipate increased use of these models for offensive tasks such as phishing content generation, vulnerability research automation, and social engineering at scale.</description></item><item><title>LLM Agents Weaponised to Deliver Ransomware via Langflow Platform</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/llm-agents-weaponised-to-deliver-ransomware-via-langflow-platform/</link><pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 10:52:14 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/llm-agents-weaponised-to-deliver-ransomware-via-langflow-platform/</guid><category>Threat Level: CRITICAL</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>First Look</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>A documented ransomware attack leveraged agentic AI infrastructure — specifically the Langflow LLM orchestration platform — to automate multi-stage intrusion chains combining known exploitation techniques with real-time LLM reasoning. This marks a significant escalation in threat actor capability, demonstrating that agentic AI can serve as an autonomous attack coordinator rather than merely an assistant. Security teams running self-hosted AI orchestration platforms now face an expanded attack surface where the AI layer itself can be both the entry point and the execution engine.</description></item><item><title>Poisoned MCP Tool Descriptions Enable Silent Data Exfiltration via AI Agents</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/poisoned-mcp-tool-descriptions-enable-silent-data-exfiltration-via-ai-agents/</link><pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 10:50:50 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/poisoned-mcp-tool-descriptions-enable-silent-data-exfiltration-via-ai-agents/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Research</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.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><description>Microsoft researchers have demonstrated how attackers can embed hidden instructions inside MCP tool descriptions to covertly redirect AI agents into exfiltrating sensitive business data. Because each individual action the agent takes appears legitimate — using approved tools and the user's own permissions — default security controls generate no alerts. The attack exploits a fundamental design tension in MCP: tool descriptions simultaneously carry operational instructions and attacker-controlled data, collapsing a critical trust boundary.</description></item><item><title>Fake Bug Reports Weaponised to Hijack AI Coding Agents at Scale</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/fake-bug-reports-weaponised-to-hijack-ai-coding-agents-at-scale/</link><pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 10:50:04 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/fake-bug-reports-weaponised-to-hijack-ai-coding-agents-at-scale/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>A technique dubbed 'agentjacking' exploits the inability of AI coding agents to distinguish between legitimate content and embedded instructions, allowing attackers to hijack agent behaviour through maliciously crafted bug reports. The attack represents a scalable, low-barrier prompt injection vector targeting developer workflows that rely on autonomous AI agents. As AI coding assistants gain broader adoption and elevated system permissions, this class of attack poses a significant risk to software supply chain integrity.</description></item><item><title>Zero-Click Prompt Injection Flaws in Cursor IDE Enable OS-Level Code Execution</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/zero-click-prompt-injection-flaws-in-cursor-ide-enable-os-level-code-execution/</link><pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 10:47:24 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/zero-click-prompt-injection-flaws-in-cursor-ide-enable-os-level-code-execution/</guid><category>Threat Level: CRITICAL</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.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>A set of vulnerabilities dubbed 'DuneSlide' in the Cursor AI code editor allow attackers to conduct zero-click prompt injection attacks that escape the application's sandbox and execute arbitrary code at the operating system level. The flaws represent a critical escalation of AI-native attack surface risks, targeting developers who rely on AI-assisted coding environments. Because exploitation requires no user interaction, the attack chain is particularly dangerous in supply chain and watering-hole scenarios.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Current AI Launches Open Source AI Gap Map Indexing 421 Projects</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-current-ai-launches-open-source-ai-gap-map-indexing-421-projects/</link><pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 08:53:39 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-current-ai-launches-open-source-ai-gap-map-indexing-421-projects/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Research</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0019 - Publish Poisoned Datasets</category><category>AML.T0020 - Poison Training Data</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><description>Current AI has published the Open Source AI Gap Map v0.1, a structured, MIT-licensed index of 421 open-source AI products spanning models, datasets, software tools, and hardware, backed by 1,184 YAML files and tracking over 16,000 GitHub repositories. For defenders, this comprehensive public inventory creates a dual-use intelligence resource: while it aids supply chain visibility, it simultaneously provides adversaries with a curated, machine-readable attack surface map of the open-source AI ecosystem. Security teams should treat this dataset as threat-actor recon material and cross-reference their own AI dependencies against it immediately.</description></item><item><title>DeepSeek Turns LLM Hallucination Into Working Browser-Only Ransomware Technique</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/deepseek-turns-llm-hallucination-into-working-browser-only-ransomware-technique/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 09:45:56 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/deepseek-turns-llm-hallucination-into-working-browser-only-ransomware-technique/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>Research</category><category>First Look</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><description>Check Point Research demonstrates how DeepSeek's lower refusal rates allowed researchers to transform an LLM-hallucinated malware concept into a practical browser-native ransomware technique targeting Android photo directories via the File System Access API. The attack requires no native payload, APK installation, or root access — only social engineering to obtain a legitimate browser permission prompt. This research highlights how frontier AI models with weaker safety controls can independently design novel attack paths not yet seen in real-world campaigns.</description></item><item><title>Prompt Injection Chain Breaks Cursor AI Sandbox, Enables Full RCE</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/prompt-injection-chain-breaks-cursor-ai-sandbox-enables-full-rce/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 09:44:45 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/prompt-injection-chain-breaks-cursor-ai-sandbox-enables-full-rce/</guid><category>Threat Level: CRITICAL</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Two critical vulnerabilities (CVE-2026-50548 and CVE-2026-50549) in the Cursor AI code editor allow prompt injection attacks delivered via MCP services or web search results to escape the editor's terminal sandbox and execute arbitrary commands on a developer's machine without any user interaction. Both flaws abuse the sandbox's write-permission logic — one through a misconfigured working directory parameter, the other through a symlink-resolution fallback — ultimately allowing overwrite of the sandbox helper binary itself. The attack surface is significant given Cursor's reported adoption across more than half of Fortune 500 companies; all versions prior to 3.0 remain vulnerable.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Open-Source Tool Lets Claude and Any LLM Watch Videos Locally</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-open-source-tool-lets-claude-and-any-llm-watch-videos-locally/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 09:31:07 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-open-source-tool-lets-claude-and-any-llm-watch-videos-locally/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>claude-real-video is an open-source, MIT-licensed Python library that extracts scene-change frames, deduplicates images, and transcribes audio from any video URL or local file, then packages the result as a folder any LLM can consume — all processed locally without cloud upload. For defenders, this dramatically expands the multimodal prompt injection surface by enabling adversaries to embed malicious instructions inside video content that LLM pipelines will now ingest and act upon. Security teams building or deploying LLM agents with video-processing capabilities must treat video content as an untrusted, potentially adversarial input channel.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Enterprise IGA Platforms Expose Structural Gaps as AI Agents Proliferate</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-enterprise-iga-platforms-expose-structural-gaps-as-ai-agents/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 09:30:12 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-enterprise-iga-platforms-expose-structural-gaps-as-ai-agents/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>A new analysis published via The Hacker News details how traditional Identity Governance and Administration (IGA) frameworks — built around HR-driven, human-centric lifecycle events — are fundamentally unequipped to govern AI agents acting as autonomous principals in enterprise environments. Security teams face a growing blind spot: AI agents acquire, retain, and exercise entitlements without triggering the joiner-mover-leaver workflows, manager attestations, or termination events that IGA tooling depends on. Defenders must now treat AI agent identities as a separate governance tier, requiring purpose-built provisioning, audit, and deprovisioning logic that existing platforms like Workday, SailPoint, and Azure AD connectors were never designed to provide.</description></item><item><title>Claude Opus 4.7 Used to Discover Critical API Flaw in Major Ticketing Platform</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/claude-opus-4-7-used-to-discover-critical-api-flaw-in-major-ticketing-platform/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 09:28:45 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/claude-opus-4-7-used-to-discover-critical-api-flaw-in-major-ticketing-platform/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Research</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><description>Security researcher Ian Carroll leveraged Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.7 to identify a critical vulnerability in Front Gate Tickets—a Live Nation subsidiary handling ticketing for major US festivals—that granted super-administrator access and the ability to freely issue tickets of any value. The case demonstrates LLM-assisted autonomous vulnerability discovery at scale, with Carroll noting the AI could likely have completed the full exploit chain without human intervention. Front Gate patched the flaw within 24 hours of disclosure, confirming no evidence of prior exploitation.</description></item><item><title>Anthropic's Mythos AI Vulnerability Discovery Tool Pairs with IBM Project Lightwell</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-s-mythos-ai-vulnerability-discovery-tool-pairs-with-ibm/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 09:27:52 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-s-mythos-ai-vulnerability-discovery-tool-pairs-with-ibm/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0019 - Publish Poisoned Datasets</category><category>AML.T0020 - Poison Training Data</category><category>AML.T0031 - Erode ML Model Integrity</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>Anthropic's Mythos capability, combined with IBM and Red Hat's Project Lightwell service backed by 20,000 engineers and $5B, introduces an AI-driven pipeline for discovering and remediating bugs in open-source software at industrial scale. This creates a dual-edged attack surface: adversaries who can influence Mythos's findings, its training data, or the remediation pipeline gain a privileged position to inject subtle vulnerabilities into widely-deployed open-source components. Defenders must treat the AI vulnerability-finding and patch-generation pipeline itself as a high-value, high-risk supply chain asset requiring rigorous integrity controls.</description></item><item><title>AI Agent Autonomously Executes Full Ransomware Attack Chain via Langflow RCE</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/ai-agent-autonomously-executes-full-ransomware-attack-chain-via-langflow-rce/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 09:25:09 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/ai-agent-autonomously-executes-full-ransomware-attack-chain-via-langflow-rce/</guid><category>Threat Level: CRITICAL</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</category><category>First Look</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><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Sysdig has documented what it claims is the first end-to-end ransomware attack orchestrated autonomously by an AI agent, attributed to a threat actor tracked as JADEPUFFER. The agent exploited a known remote code execution flaw in Langflow (CVE-2025-3248) to gain initial access, harvest credentials, pivot laterally, and ultimately encrypt and destroy a production database — all without human intervention at the keyboard. The incident demonstrates that AI agents can now lower the skill floor for complex, multi-stage attacks to near zero, representing a qualitative shift in the ransomware threat landscape.</description></item><item><title>LLM Hallucinated Domains Create Exploitable Supply Chain Attack Surface</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/llm-hallucinated-domains-create-exploitable-supply-chain-attack-surface/</link><pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 04:36:10 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/llm-hallucinated-domains-create-exploitable-supply-chain-attack-surface/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Researchers have identified a novel attack vector dubbed 'Phantom Squatting', in which LLMs consistently hallucinate plausible but non-existent web domains for legitimate brands, which attackers can then register and weaponise. Unlike traditional typosquatting, these hallucinated domains carry implicit trust because they originate from AI-generated outputs that users and developers may act upon without verification. The technique is difficult to detect because the domains are not misspellings but plausible inventions, making automated defences less effective.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Google Launches Gemini Spark Agentic Assistant on Mac with File and App Access</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-google-launches-gemini-spark-agentic-assistant-on-mac-with-file-and/</link><pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 04:35:20 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-google-launches-gemini-spark-agentic-assistant-on-mac-with-file-and/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</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.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><description>Google has expanded Gemini Spark to macOS, giving the agentic assistant access to local files, third-party app integrations (including Dropbox, Canva, and Instacart), custom MCP connections, and real-time topic monitoring. This substantially widens the attack surface for enterprise defenders, as a compromised or manipulated Spark agent gains a foothold across local file systems, cloud workspaces, and external service APIs simultaneously. The addition of custom Model Context Protocol support is particularly concerning, as it allows arbitrary third-party tool connections with unclear trust boundaries and permission scoping.</description></item><item><title>First Look: AWS Brings NVIDIA Nemotron and OpenAI GPT OSS Models to GovCloud</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-brings-nvidia-nemotron-and-openai-gpt-oss-models-to-govcloud/</link><pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 04:34:41 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-aws-brings-nvidia-nemotron-and-openai-gpt-oss-models-to-govcloud/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Agentic AI</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.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</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><description>AWS has expanded Amazon Bedrock in GovCloud (US) to include NVIDIA Nemotron and OpenAI's open-weight GPT OSS models, enabling U.S. government agencies and defense contractors to run frontier LLMs within FedRAMP High and DoD SRG compliance boundaries. This expansion introduces large, capable open-weight models into sensitive government mission workflows — including intelligence analysis, security log review, and contract automation — dramatically increasing the consequence of a successful prompt injection or jailbreak. Defenders must account for the elevated impact of model compromise in classified-adjacent environments, supply chain trust assumptions around open-weight model weights, and the risk of agentic workflows operating with privileged data access under reduced human oversight.</description></item><item><title>AI-Hallucinated Domains Weaponised in Active Software Supply Chain Attacks</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/ai-hallucinated-domains-weaponised-in-active-software-supply-chain-attacks/</link><pubDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2026 05:45:29 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/ai-hallucinated-domains-weaponised-in-active-software-supply-chain-attacks/</guid><category>Threat Level: CRITICAL</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><description>Unit 42 researchers have documented 'phantom squatting', a novel attack vector where adversaries register domains that LLMs consistently hallucinate when responding to developer queries, intercepting traffic from AI-assisted workflows. Analysis of 913 brands across 685,339 URL queries uncovered 13,229 confirmed malicious URLs and approximately 250,000 unregistered hallucinated domains still available for adversarial pre-registration. A concrete case study reveals a fully operational phishing kit, Montana Empire, built with an AI coding assistant and deployed against a domain Unit 42 had flagged as high-risk 23 days prior.</description></item><item><title>Anthropic Restores Global Access to Mythos and Fable Models After Export Restrictions Lifted</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-restores-global-access-to-mythos-and-fable-models-after/</link><pubDate>Wed, 01 Jul 2026 05:44:44 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-restores-global-access-to-mythos-and-fable-models-after/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0015 - Evade ML Model</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><description>The US government has lifted export restrictions on Anthropic's Mythos and Fable models, restoring broad international access to what are described as the most capable AI models publicly available, with Mythos specifically noted for its advanced ability to identify and exploit software vulnerabilities. Defenders must now contend with a significantly wider pool of threat actors — including foreign nationals and nation-state-affiliated researchers — who can access a model with documented offensive security capabilities. The policy reversal also introduces regulatory uncertainty that complicates enterprise risk assessments, as organizations cannot rely on stable governance signals to calibrate their AI security postures.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Token Security Surfaces Agentic AI Identity Risks Across Enterprise Deployments</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-token-security-surfaces-agentic-ai-identity-risks-across-enterprise/</link><pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2026 11:11:51 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-token-security-surfaces-agentic-ai-identity-risks-across-enterprise/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</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.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Token Security has published a detailed analysis of the identity and access management failures emerging as agentic AI systems proliferate across enterprise environments, highlighting how AI agents authenticate, hold credentials, and act autonomously across production systems without adequate oversight. Unlike traditional machine identities, AI agents combine human-like goal-directed behaviour with machine-speed execution, creating credential sprawl that existing IAM programs were never designed to govern. Security teams face a compounding risk: agents are being provisioned with overprivileged OAuth grants, API tokens, and cloud roles that remain unreviewed and unrevoked long after the original use case has expired.</description></item><item><title>AI Tools Discover WebKit Vulnerabilities as Apple Accelerates Patch Cadence</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/ai-tools-discover-webkit-vulnerabilities-as-apple-accelerates-patch-cadence/</link><pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2026 11:03:15 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/ai-tools-discover-webkit-vulnerabilities-as-apple-accelerates-patch-cadence/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Industry News</category><category>Research</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><description>Apple patched over 30 vulnerabilities across iOS, macOS, and Safari, with four WebKit flaws credited to AI-assisted discovery by OpenAI Codex Security and Anthropic researchers using Claude. The disclosure marks a notable shift in AI's role in offensive and defensive security research, with Apple explicitly citing AI-accelerated exploit development as the reason for expediting its patch release timeline. This represents a concrete, documented instance of AI tooling being used to find memory corruption and use-after-free vulnerabilities in a major browser engine.</description></item></channel></rss>