<?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, 30 Jun 2026 16:42:09 +0530</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://gridthegrey.com/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><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><item><title>BioShocking Attack Exploits Indirect Prompt Injection to Steal Credentials via AI Browsers</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/bioshocking-attack-exploits-indirect-prompt-injection-to-steal-credentials-via/</link><pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2026 11:01:35 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/bioshocking-attack-exploits-indirect-prompt-injection-to-steal-credentials-via/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><description>Security firm LayerX demonstrated a novel indirect prompt injection attack dubbed 'BioShocking' that manipulates AI browser agents into exfiltrating user credentials by embedding adversarial instructions inside web-based puzzle content. Six AI browsers and assistants were successfully compromised, including ChatGPT Atlas, Perplexity Comet, and Anthropic's Claude extension, with agents retrieving SSH credentials from GitHub repositories without triggering safety refusals. Vendor responses were inconsistent, with only OpenAI issuing a confirmed fix, highlighting the systemic risk of agentic AI systems that conflate user intent with malicious page content.</description></item><item><title>Indirect Prompt Injection in Repositories Gives Claude Code Full Shell Access</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/indirect-prompt-injection-in-repositories-gives-claude-code-full-shell-access/</link><pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2026 10:59:28 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/indirect-prompt-injection-in-repositories-gives-claude-code-full-shell-access/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><description>Researchers have demonstrated that indirect prompt injection attacks embedded within seemingly benign code repositories can cause Claude Code — Anthropic's agentic coding assistant — to spawn a reverse shell on a developer's machine. The attack exploits Claude Code's autonomous execution capabilities, using hidden instructions in repository content to hijack the host system without any explicit user consent. This highlights a critical risk in agentic AI tools that operate with elevated system privileges in developer environments.</description></item><item><title>First Look: JustVugg Releases NanoEuler GPT-2 Scale LLM Built in Pure C/CUDA</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-justvugg-releases-nanoeuler-gpt-2-scale-llm-built-in-pure-c-cuda/</link><pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2026 14:35:58 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-justvugg-releases-nanoeuler-gpt-2-scale-llm-built-in-pure-c-cuda/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>First Look</category><category>Adversarial ML</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Research</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>AML.T0018 - Backdoor ML Model</category><category>AML.T0020 - Poison Training Data</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0031 - Erode ML Model Integrity</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><description>NanoEuler is an open-source GPT-2-class language model (~116M parameters) built entirely from scratch in C/CUDA, including hand-written backpropagation, a BPE tokenizer, FlashAttention, pretraining, and supervised fine-tuning — with RLHF/DPO planned. For defenders, the significance lies in the democratisation of low-level, dependency-free LLM training infrastructure: adversaries gain a highly portable, auditable, and modifiable training stack that bypasses standard ML framework telemetry and supply chain controls. Security teams should treat this class of 'from-scratch' open-source LLM tooling as a potential foundation for covert fine-tuning pipelines, backdoor insertion, and evasion of model-level safety controls.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Z.ai Releases Open-Weight GLM-5.2 Matching Frontier Models on Cybersecurity Tasks</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-z-ai-releases-open-weight-glm-5-2-matching-frontier-models-on-tasks/</link><pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2026 14:32:17 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-z-ai-releases-open-weight-glm-5-2-matching-frontier-models-on-tasks/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Research</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0018 - Backdoor ML Model</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0020 - Poison Training Data</category><description>Zhipu AI (Z.ai) has released GLM-5.2, an open-weight model that researchers report matches Anthropic's Mythos in bug-finding and cybersecurity-related tasks, while remaining freely downloadable and runnable on commodity hardware. The open-weight distribution removes access controls and usage monitoring that restrict frontier closed models, enabling unconstrained offensive security use by any actor. Defenders face a materially elevated threat from nation-state and cybercriminal actors who can now fine-tune, deploy, and weaponise a frontier-class vulnerability-discovery model without API gatekeeping or usage telemetry.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Anthropic CEO Warns Lawmakers Open-Source AI Poses Safety Control Risks</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-ceo-warns-lawmakers-open-source-ai-poses-safety-control/</link><pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2026 14:00:53 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-ceo-warns-lawmakers-open-source-ai-poses-safety-control/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>Industry News</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0018 - Backdoor ML Model</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0019 - Publish Poisoned Datasets</category><category>AML.T0031 - Erode ML Model Integrity</category><category>AML.T0043 - Craft Adversarial Data</category><description>Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei testified to lawmakers that open-source AI models present a systemic safety risk because once released, developers lose the ability to monitor misuse, revoke access, or patch safety guardrails. For defenders, this formalises a long-standing asymmetry: closed-source safety controls (rate-limiting, usage monitoring, kill-switches) become irrelevant once capable weights are publicly distributed. Security teams building on or competing against open-weight models must now treat every downloaded model artifact as a potentially unpatched, unmonitored endpoint that can be fine-tuned to remove safety constraints entirely.</description></item><item><title>DNS-Exfiltrated Malware Exploits AI Coding Agents via Clean GitHub Repos</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/dns-exfiltrated-malware-exploits-ai-coding-agents-via-clean-github-repos/</link><pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2026 03:25:51 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/dns-exfiltrated-malware-exploits-ai-coding-agents-via-clean-github-repos/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><description>Mozilla 0DIN researchers demonstrated a novel attack chain in which a seemingly clean GitHub repository tricks AI coding agents like Claude Code into executing a reverse shell payload — with no malicious code ever present in the repo itself. The attack leverages three innocuous components: a Python package that deliberately errors on first run, an error message that instructs the agent to run an init command, and a shell script that fetches and executes a payload stored in an attacker-controlled DNS TXT record. The technique exploits the autonomous error-recovery behaviour of agentic AI tools, effectively turning a safety feature into an attack vector.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Meta AI Releases AgentKits with 60 Production-Ready Agent Blueprints</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-meta-ai-releases-agentkits-with-60-production-ready-agent-blueprints/</link><pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2026 03:17:10 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-meta-ai-releases-agentkits-with-60-production-ready-agent-blueprints/</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.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</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>AgentKits ships 60 open, free AI agent blueprints covering 30 operational categories — from incident response and access provisioning to HR screening and fraud detection — complete with copyable system prompts, tool definitions, and workflow architectures targeting Claude, OpenAI, LangGraph, and n8n. The free, no-login distribution model dramatically lowers the barrier for adversaries to study, clone, or weaponise production-grade agent architectures, including sensitive categories like SecOps triage, access provisioning, and compliance monitoring. Defenders must treat these blueprints as publicly documented attack playbooks and audit any internally deployed instances against their documented worst-case actions and trust levels.</description></item><item><title>First Look: OpenAI Previews GPT-5.6 Sol With Enhanced Cybersecurity and Exploit Capabilities</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-previews-gpt-5-6-sol-with-enhanced-cybersecurity-and-exploit/</link><pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2026 03:15:29 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-previews-gpt-5-6-sol-with-enhanced-cybersecurity-and-exploit/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Research</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</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.T0015 - Evade ML Model</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>OpenAI has released a limited preview of GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna to select partners, positioning Sol as its most capable model for vulnerability research and exploit chain development, benchmarked against real-world hardened targets via an internal framework called VulnLMP. The model's demonstrated ability to produce credible memory safety leads and automate substantial portions of vulnerability research pipelines materially lowers the barrier for both defenders and adversaries. Security teams should expect accelerated attacker timelines for exploit development and increased pressure on detection and patch-deployment cadences.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Sakana AI and 360 Launch Frontier Cybersecurity-Capable Models Outside US Export Controls</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-sakana-ai-and-360-launch-frontier-cybersecurity-capable-models-us/</link><pubDate>Mon, 29 Jun 2026 03:13:50 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-sakana-ai-and-360-launch-frontier-cybersecurity-capable-models-us/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</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.T0018 - Backdoor ML Model</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Sakana AI's Fugu and Chinese firm 360's Tulongfeng are frontier AI models positioned as functional alternatives to Anthropic's export-restricted Mythos and Fable 5, with Fugu explicitly designed for agentic orchestration across third-party model APIs. For defenders, the proliferation of cybersecurity-focused frontier models outside US regulatory reach removes a key friction point that previously slowed adversary access to high-capability AI offensive tooling. The agentic, multi-model orchestration design of Fugu in particular introduces compounded supply-chain and prompt-injection risk for any enterprise connecting these models to existing tool ecosystems.</description></item><item><title>Runaway AI Code Review Agents Burn $41K in Adversarial Disagreement Loop</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/runaway-ai-code-review-agents-burn-41k-in-adversarial-disagreement-loop/</link><pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2026 04:08:34 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/runaway-ai-code-review-agents-burn-41k-in-adversarial-disagreement-loop/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Research</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</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><description>A hypothetical but technically grounded incident report depicts two competing AI code review agents entering an uncontrolled disagreement loop over a suspected malicious package, generating 340 comments and $41,255 in inference costs before human intervention. The scenario illustrates real risks of excessive agency, lack of circuit-breakers, and cost-based denial-of-service in multi-agent agentic pipelines. While fictional, the scenario directly mirrors documented failure modes in production AI systems and supply chain security workflows.</description></item><item><title>Poisoned Tenant Attack Abuses OpenAI Workspaces to Target Cybersecurity Firms</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/poisoned-tenant-attack-abuses-openai-workspaces-to-target-cybersecurity-firms/</link><pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2026 04:02:04 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/poisoned-tenant-attack-abuses-openai-workspaces-to-target-cybersecurity-firms/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Industry News</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>Threat actors are registering fraudulent OpenAI tenants impersonating legitimate companies and inviting employees to join them, in a campaign dubbed 'Poisoned Tenant' by Push Security. The attack exploits OpenAI's legitimate invitation infrastructure, making phishing emails appear authentic as they pass all email authentication checks. The goal appears to be tricking employees into submitting sensitive corporate information via ChatGPT chats and projects within the attacker-controlled workspace.</description></item><item><title>First Look: OpenAI Launches GPT-5.6 Lineup with Enhanced Agentic and Cybersecurity Capabilities</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-launches-gpt-5-6-lineup-with-enhanced-agentic-and-capabilities/</link><pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2026 04:01:06 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-launches-gpt-5-6-lineup-with-enhanced-agentic-and-capabilities/</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.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><description>OpenAI has released GPT-5.6 in a restricted preview to government-vetted partners, featuring three models (Sol, Terra, Luna) with significantly upgraded agentic capabilities in coding, biology, and cybersecurity, including a coordinated multi-subagent 'ultra' mode. The cybersecurity-specific enhancements and agentic orchestration introduce meaningful new attack surface: adversaries gaining access to Sol's coordinated subagent architecture could automate sophisticated multi-stage intrusions at scale previously requiring significant human expertise. The restricted rollout itself creates a novel supply chain and access-control risk, as the 'trusted partner' gating model concentrates high-capability model access among a small set of privileged accounts, making partner credential compromise a high-value target.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Anthropic's Claude Mythos 5 Released Under U.S. Government Controlled Access Framework</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-s-claude-mythos-5-released-under-u-s-government-controlled/</link><pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2026 04:00:07 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-s-claude-mythos-5-released-under-u-s-government-controlled/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Jailbreaks</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</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.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><description>The U.S. Commerce Department has lifted export controls on Anthropic's Claude Mythos 5, permitting access to over 100 vetted U.S. institutions and government agencies under a nascent federal AI licensing regime. For defenders, this tiered-release model introduces a new class of risk: the 'trusted partner' designation becomes a high-value target, as compromise of any listed entity grants implicit legitimacy to interact with a model previously deemed too dangerous for general release. Security teams at approved organizations should treat Mythos 5 access credentials and API endpoints as critical assets, and assume adversaries will probe the boundary between licensed and unlicensed access patterns.</description></item><item><title>6,000 Prompt Injection Attempts Fail Against Frontier Model — But Risks Remain</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/6000-prompt-injection-attempts-fail-against-frontier-model-but-risks-remain/</link><pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2026 03:57:24 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/6000-prompt-injection-attempts-fail-against-frontier-model-but-risks-remain/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Research</category><category>Industry News</category><category>AML.T0051 - LLM Prompt Injection</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><description>A public challenge exposing an AI email assistant to over 6,000 prompt injection attempts found that Claude Opus 4.6 successfully resisted all efforts to leak secrets or execute malicious instructions embedded in emails. While the result suggests frontier model training against injection attacks is meaningfully improving, security researchers caution that the absence of a successful attack under constrained conditions does not constitute a security guarantee. The author and Hacker News community both note that sophisticated or novel attack vectors could still break through, and irreversible-damage scenarios should not rely solely on model-level defences.</description></item><item><title>First Look: OpenAI GPT-5.6 Released Under White House-Directed Controlled Access Program</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-gpt-5-6-released-under-white-house-directed-controlled-access/</link><pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2026 05:25:53 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-openai-gpt-5-6-released-under-white-house-directed-controlled-access/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>First Look</category><category>Regulatory</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Supply Chain</category><category>Agentic AI</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><category>AML.T0044 - Full ML Model Access</category><category>AML.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0010 - ML Supply Chain Compromise</category><category>AML.T0054 - LLM Jailbreak</category><description>OpenAI's GPT-5.6, a frontier model with advanced cyber capabilities, is being released exclusively to vetted partners under a White House-directed limited-access programme coordinated with the Office of the National Cyber Director and OSTP. This controlled rollout signals that the model's offensive cyber potential — including autonomous vulnerability identification and exploitation — is significant enough to warrant government-gated distribution, mirroring Anthropic's Project Glasswing model for Claude Mythos. For defenders, the emergence of a government-approved, partner-tier distribution model creates new supply chain trust questions and raises the stakes around who gains early access and how that access is verified, monitored, and potentially abused.</description></item><item><title>First Look: GitHub Copilot Agentic Harness Evaluated Across Models and Tasks</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-github-copilot-agentic-harness-evaluated-across-models-and-tasks/</link><pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2026 05:24:24 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-github-copilot-agentic-harness-evaluated-across-models-and-tasks/</guid><category>Threat Level: MEDIUM</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.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0056 - LLM Meta Prompt Extraction</category><description>GitHub has published an evaluation of its Copilot agentic harness, detailing how the orchestration layer performs across multiple underlying models and coding tasks — effectively documenting the architecture of an autonomous, multi-step code generation and execution system. For defenders, this transparency reveals an orchestration surface where prompt injection, supply chain manipulation, and model-switching logic can be targeted across a broader set of model backends than previously understood. Security teams should treat the harness itself as a critical trust boundary, since compromising task routing or model selection logic could silently redirect agentic workflows to less-safe or adversary-controlled model endpoints.</description></item><item><title>First Look: Anthropic Tests Mobile Remote Control for Claude Cowork Agentic Desktop Tasks</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-tests-mobile-remote-control-for-claude-cowork-agentic-tasks/</link><pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2026 05:22:18 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/first-look-anthropic-tests-mobile-remote-control-for-claude-cowork-agentic-tasks/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</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.T0047 - ML-Enabled Product or Service</category><category>AML.T0057 - LLM Data Leakage</category><category>AML.T0012 - Valid Accounts</category><category>AML.T0040 - ML Model Inference API Access</category><description>Anthropic is expanding its Claude Cowork agentic desktop feature to mobile, enabling users to remotely initiate, monitor, and steer long-running AI tasks on their PC from a smartphone — with background task execution persisting even after the mobile app is closed. This cross-device architecture introduces a new attack surface: a mobile application acting as a command-and-control interface for an agent with local filesystem access, expanding the blast radius of device compromise, session hijacking, and prompt injection attacks. Defenders must now account for a persistent, background-running agentic process on employee endpoints that can be triggered or manipulated via a separate, potentially less-secured mobile channel.</description></item><item><title>Malware Embeds Policy-Triggering Text to Evade LLM-Based Security Scanners</title><link>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/malware-embeds-policy-triggering-text-to-evade-llm-based-security-scanners/</link><pubDate>Thu, 25 Jun 2026 04:31:41 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://gridthegrey.com/posts/malware-embeds-policy-triggering-text-to-evade-llm-based-security-scanners/</guid><category>Threat Level: HIGH</category><category>Prompt Injection</category><category>LLM Security</category><category>Adversarial ML</category><category>Research</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 embedded nuclear and biological weapons-related text inside JavaScript comment blocks within spyware payloads, specifically to trigger refusal behaviour or context confusion in LLM-powered security analysis pipelines. The technique exploits the architectural gap between how interpreters (which skip comments) and language models (which ingest the full file as input) process the same file. While ineffective against traditional static analysis tooling, the tactic represents a practical adversarial countermeasure targeting AI-first triage workflows and analyst copilots.</description></item></channel></rss>