Recent Posts - page 31
-
LLM Red Teaming Tactics: Prompt Injection Reconnaissance & Evasion Techniques
Date: July 23, 2025Author: AI Defense LeagueCategory: Red Teaming | Penetration Testing | LLM Security Overview This post is the first in a new blog series focused on penetration testing and red teaming techniques for Large Language Models (LLMs). Today’s… Read More ›
-
Adversarial Fine-Tuning — Poisoning and Repurposing Open Source Models
Overview Open-source LLMs offer transparency and innovation — but they also create new risks when adversaries fine-tune these models for malicious purposes.This isn’t about prompt engineering or jailbreaking. It’s about retraining models to embed bias, backdoors, or harmful capabilities directly… Read More ›
-
LLM Jailbreak Marketplaces — Buying, Selling, and Sharing Prompt Exploits
Overview As LLMs become more capable and widely deployed, attackers are turning their attention to jailbreaking them — crafting prompts that bypass built-in safety restrictions. But what was once a fringe curiosity is now a full-fledged underground market: LLM jailbreaks… Read More ›
-
Synthetic Identities and Deepfakes — AI and the Future of Fraud Operations
Overview Identity has always been at the core of trust and access — and now AI is shattering the line between real and synthetic. Today’s attackers use AI to generate realistic names, faces, documents, voices, and digital histories — giving… Read More ›
-
The Shadow Model Problem — When Employees Build Unauthorized AI Tools
Overview Shadow IT has long been a concern in cybersecurity — now it has a new form:Shadow AI models. Across enterprises, well-meaning employees are training or deploying large language models (LLMs) on internal data without authorization, oversight, or security review…. Read More ›
-
Model Theft and LLM Exfiltration — Protecting AI Intellectual Property
Overview In the race to deploy powerful AI systems, many organizations have overlooked a growing threat:Model theft — the unauthorized access, copying, or extraction of proprietary large language models (LLMs). These models represent millions of dollars in training costs, intellectual… Read More ›
-
LLMs as Malware Generators — Limits of Filtering and Ethical Guardrails
Overview Large Language Models (LLMs) were never designed to write malware — but with the right prompting, many of them can. Despite built-in safety filters and ethical guardrails, attackers are finding ways to bypass restrictions and use AI to generate… Read More ›
-
Reverse Engineering APIs and SaaS Platforms with AI
Overview APIs are the backbone of modern SaaS. They expose data, business logic, and workflows to users, apps, and integrations. But now, attackers are using AI to reverse engineer API behavior, endpoints, and internal functionality — often without access to… Read More ›
-
Prompt Leakage via Auto-Save, Logging, and Chat History
Overview Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly integrated into internal tools, development workflows, and customer-facing applications. But beneath the surface lies a subtle and often overlooked risk: Prompt leakage — the unintended exposure of sensitive prompts, responses, or context through… Read More ›
-
Steganography with AI — Hiding Payloads in Text, Images, and Prompts
Overview Steganography — the art of hiding messages in plain sight — has entered the AI era. As models generate content that appears natural and benign, attackers have discovered how to embed hidden data into AI outputs — creating covert… Read More ›
Featured Categories
Cybersecurity Blog ›
-
AI Security Daily Briefing: June 05, 2026
June 5, 2026
-
Cybersecurity Daily Briefing: June 05, 2026
June 5, 2026
Cybersecurity News ›
-
Cybersecurity Daily Briefing: June 04, 2026
June 4, 2026
-
Cybersecurity Daily Briefing: June 03, 2026
June 3, 2026
Artificial Intelligence ›
-
AI Security Daily Briefing: June 04, 2026
June 4, 2026
-
AI Security Daily Briefing: June 03, 2026
June 3, 2026