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NSPM-11 Elevates AI Security from Best Practice to National Security Requirement

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HiddenLayer and Databricks Unity AI Gateway

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From Detection to Evidence: Making AI Security Actionable in Real Time

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Explore our glossary to get clear, practical definitions of the terms shaping AI security, governance, and risk management.

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Updating HiddenLayer’s APE Taxonomy: A New Objective Model for AI Attacks

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The Next AI Supply Chain Risk: Malicious Skills in Agentic AI

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Inside the Prompt: How LLMs Learn Roles, Follow Instructions, and Get Exploited

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Tokenization Attacks on LLMs: How Adversaries Exploit AI Language Processing

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2026 AI Threat Landscape Report

Register today to receive your copy of the report on March 18th and secure your seat for the accompanying webinar on April 8th.

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Securing AI: The Technology Playbook

A practical playbook for securing, governing, and scaling AI applications for Tech companies.

Report and Guide
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Securing AI: The Financial Services Playbook

A practical playbook for securing, governing, and scaling AI systems in financial services.

HiddenLayer AI Security Research Advisory

CVE-2026-45833

Post-Authentication RCE via update_collection

Any authenticated user with UPDATE_COLLECTION permission can achieve remote code execution by updating a collection's embedding function to reference a malicious HuggingFace model with trust_remote_code: true. The update_collection endpoint uses the same build_from_config() code path as CVE-2026-45829. Authentication runs before model loading, so this is not a pre-authentication issue, but the model instantiation itself is unguarded.

CVE-2026-45832

V1 API Tenant Isolation Bypass via Null Tenant/Database Context

All V1 collection-level endpoints pass None for tenant and database to the authorization layer, making tenant-scoped access control impossible through V1, regardless of which authorization provider is configured. V1 cannot be disabled. Combined with CVE-2026-45830, any authenticated user has unrestricted read/write access to any collection by UUID through V1 endpoints.

CVE-2026-45831

RBAC Authorization Bypass: Resource Context Ignored

ChromaDB's SimpleRBACAuthorizationProvider, the only built-in RBAC provider and the one used in all official documentation examples, evaluates whether a user holds a given permission but never checks which tenant, database, or collection that permission applies to. A user configured with read access to a specific tenant can read from any tenant. A user with write access can modify data across all tenants.

CVE-2026-8828

Cross-Tenant Data Access via IDOR in Collection Lookup

The same vulnerability as CVE-2026-45830 is present in the Rust codebase. Any authenticated user with a valid collection UUID can read, write, update, or delete data in any tenant's collection regardless of which tenant they belong to. ChromaDB's collection lookup skips the tenant and database filter when a UUID is provided.

In the News

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HiddenLayer “Awardable” for Department of Defense Work in the CDAO’s Tradewinds Solutions Marketplace

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HiddenLayer Unveils New Agentic Runtime Security Capabilities for Securing Autonomous AI Execution

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HiddenLayer Releases the 2026 AI Threat Landscape Report, Spotlighting the Rise of Agentic AI and the Expanding Attack Surface of Autonomous Systems

Insights
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NSPM-11 Elevates AI Security from Best Practice to National Security Requirement

NSPM-11 elevates AI security to a national security requirement. Learn how AI assurance, model security, and threat detection support trusted AI adoption

Insights
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HiddenLayer and Databricks Unity AI Gateway

Databricks' Unity AI Gateway announcement signals a new era of AI governance, where cost visibility, security, and control are essential for scaling AI.

Insights
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From Detection to Evidence: Making AI Security Actionable in Real Time

Insights
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The Threat Congress Just Saw Isn’t New. What Matters Is How You Defend Against It.

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Claude Mythos: AI Security Gaps Beyond Vulnerability Discovery

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Reflections on RSAC 2026: Moving Beyond Messaging and Sponsored Lists to Measurable AI Security

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Securing AI Agents: The Questions That Actually Matter

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The Hidden Risk of Agentic AI: What Happens Beyond the Prompt

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Why Autonomous AI Is the Next Great Attack Surface

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Model Intelligence

Bringing Transparency to Third-Party AI Models

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Introducing Workflow-Aligned Modules in the HiddenLayer AI Security Platform

Modern AI environments don’t fail because of a single vulnerability. They fail when security can’t keep pace with how AI is actually built, deployed, and operated. That’s why our latest platform update represents more than a UI refresh. It’s a structural evolution of how AI security is delivered.

Insights
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Inside HiddenLayer’s Research Team: The Experts Securing the Future of AI

Every new AI model expands what’s possible and what’s vulnerable. Protecting these systems requires more than traditional cybersecurity. It demands expertise in how AI itself can be manipulated, misled, or attacked. Adversarial manipulation, data poisoning, and model theft represent new attack surfaces that traditional cybersecurity isn’t equipped to defend.

Webinars

Operationalizing AI Governance: Managing Risk in Autonomous AI Systems

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Offensive and Defensive Security for Agentic AI

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How to Build Secure Agents

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Beating the AI Game, Ripple, Numerology, Darcula, Special Guests from Hidden Layer… – Malcolm Harkins, Kasimir Schulz – SWN #471

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HiddenLayer Webinar: 2024 AI Threat Landscape Report

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HiddenLayer Model Scanner

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HiddenLayer Webinar: A Guide to AI Red Teaming

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HiddenLayer Webinar: Accelerating Your Customer's AI Adoption

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HiddenLayer: AI Detection Response for GenAI

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HiddenLayer Webinar: Women Leading Cyber

research
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Updating HiddenLayer’s APE Taxonomy: A New Objective Model for AI Attacks

research
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The Next AI Supply Chain Risk: Malicious Skills in Agentic AI

research
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Inside the Prompt: How LLMs Learn Roles, Follow Instructions, and Get Exploited

research
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Tokenization Attacks on LLMs: How Adversaries Exploit AI Language Processing

research
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ChromaToast Served Pre-Auth

research
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Tokenizer Tampering

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Malware Found in Trending Hugging Face Repository "Open-OSS/privacy-filter"

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AI Agents in Production: Security Lessons from Recent Incidents

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LiteLLM Supply Chain Attack

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Exploring the Security Risks of AI Assistants like OpenClaw

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Agentic ShadowLogic

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MCP and the Shift to AI Systems

Report and Guide
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2026 AI Threat Landscape Report

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Securing AI: The Technology Playbook

Report and Guide
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Securing AI: The Financial Services Playbook

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AI Threat Landscape Report 2025

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HiddenLayer Named a Cool Vendor in AI Security

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A Step-By-Step Guide for CISOS

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AI Threat landscape Report 2024

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HiddenLayer and Intel eBook

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Forrester Opportunity Snapshot

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Gartner® Report: 3 Steps to Operationalize an Agentic AI Code of Conduct for Healthcare CIOs

news
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HiddenLayer “Awardable” for Department of Defense Work in the CDAO’s Tradewinds Solutions Marketplace

news
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HiddenLayer Unveils New Agentic Runtime Security Capabilities for Securing Autonomous AI Execution

news
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HiddenLayer Releases the 2026 AI Threat Landscape Report, Spotlighting the Rise of Agentic AI and the Expanding Attack Surface of Autonomous Systems

news
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HiddenLayer’s Malcolm Harkins Inducted into the CSO Hall of Fame

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HiddenLayer Selected as Awardee on $151B Missile Defense Agency SHIELD IDIQ Supporting the Golden Dome Initiative

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HiddenLayer Announces AWS GenAI Integrations, AI Attack Simulation Launch, and Platform Enhancements to Secure Bedrock and AgentCore Deployments

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HiddenLayer Joins Databricks’ Data Intelligence Platform for Cybersecurity

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HiddenLayer Appoints Chelsea Strong as Chief Revenue Officer to Accelerate Global Growth and Customer Expansion

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HiddenLayer Listed in AWS “ICMP” for the US Federal Government

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New TokenBreak Attack Bypasses AI Moderation with Single-Character Text Changes

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Beating the AI Game, Ripple, Numerology, Darcula, Special Guests from Hidden Layer… – Malcolm Harkins, Kasimir Schulz – SWN #471

news
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All Major Gen-AI Models Vulnerable to ‘Policy Puppetry’ Prompt Injection Attack

SAI Security Advisory

Unsafe deserialization function leads to code execution when loading a Keras model

An arbitrary code execution vulnerability exists in the TorchModuleWrapper class due to its usage of torch.load() within the from_config method. The method deserializes model data with the weights_only parameter set to False, which causes Torch to fall back on Python’s pickle module for deserialization. Since pickle is known to be unsafe and capable of executing arbitrary code during the deserialization process, a maliciously crafted model file could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary commands.

SAI Security Advisory

How Hidden Prompt Injections Can Hijack AI Code Assistants Like Cursor

When in autorun mode, Cursor checks commands against those that have been specifically blocked or allowed. The function that performs this check has a bypass in its logic that can be exploited by an attacker to craft a command that will be executed regardless of whether or not it is on the block-list or allow-list.

SAI Security Advisory

Exposure of sensitive Information allows account takeover

By default, BackendAI’s agent will write to /home/config/ when starting an interactive session. These files are readable by the default user. However, they contain sensitive information such as the user’s mail, access key, and session settings.

SAI Security Advisory

Improper access control arbitrary allows account creation

BackendAI doesn’t enable account creation. However, an exposed endpoint allows anyone to sign up with a user-privileged account.

SAI Security Advisory

Missing Authorization for Interactive Sessions

Interactive sessions do not verify whether a user is authorized and doesn’t have authentication. These missing verifications allow attackers to take over the sessions and access the data (models, code, etc.), alter the data or results, and stop the user from accessing their session.

SAI Security Advisory

Unsafe Deserialization in DeepSpeed utility function when loading the model file

If a user attempts to convert distributed checkpoints into a single consolidated file using DeepSpeed, a pytorch file with the naming convention *_optim_states.pt is used. This pytorch file returns a state which specifies the model state file, also located in the directory. This can contain a maliciously crafted data.pkl file, which, when deserialized as part of this process, may lead to arbitrary code being executed on the system.

SAI Security Advisory

keras.models.load_model when scanning .pb files leads to arbitrary code execution

If a user scans a malicious keras model in the protobuf format with Bosch AI Shield’s Watchtower vulnerability scanning tool, the arbitrary code inside of the Keras model will run, executing arbitrary code.

SAI Security Advisory

keras.models.load_model when scanning .h5 files leads to arbitrary code execution

If a user scans a malicious keras model in the H5 format with Bosch AI Shield’s Watchtower vulnerability scanning tool, the arbitrary code inside of the Keras model will run, executing arbitrary code.

SAI Security Advisory

Unsafe extraction of NeMo archive leading to arbitrary file write

An attacker can craft a malicious model containing a path traversal and share it with a victim. If the victim uses an Nvidia NeMo version prior to r2.0.0rc0 and loads the malicious model, arbitrary files may be written to disk. This can result in code execution and data tampering.

SAI Security Advisory

Eval on XML parameters allows arbitrary code execution when loading RAIL file

An attacker can craft an XML file with Python code contained within a ‘validators’ attribute. This code must be wrapped in braces to work, i.e. `{Python_code}`. This can then be passed to a victim user as a Guardrails file, and upon loading it, the Python code contained within the braces is passed into an eval function, which will execute the Python code contained within.

SAI Security Advisory

Web UI renders javascript code in ML Engine name leading to XSS

An attacker authenticated to a MindsDB instance can create an ML Engine, database, project, or upload a dataset within the UI and give it a name (or value in the dataset) containing javascript code that will render when the items are enumerated within the UI.

SAI Security Advisory

Pickle Load on inhouse BYOM model finetune leads to arbitrary code execution

An attacker authenticated to a MindsDB instance can inject a malicious pickle object containing arbitrary code into a model during the ‘inhouse’ Bring Your Own Model (BYOM) training and build process. This object will be deserialized when the model is loaded via the ‘finetune’ method, executing the arbitrary code on the server. Note this can only occur if the BYOM engine is changed in the config from the default ‘venv’ to ‘inhouse.’

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