Close Menu
SkytikSkytik

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    At Least 32 People Dead After a Mine Bridge Collapsed Due to Overcrowding

    November 17, 2025

    Here’s how I turned a Raspberry Pi into an in-car media server

    November 17, 2025

    Beloved SF cat’s death fuels Waymo criticism

    November 17, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    SkytikSkytik
    • Home
    • AI Tools
    • Online Tools
    • Tech News
    • Guides
    • Reviews
    • SEO & Marketing
    • Social Media Tools
    SkytikSkytik
    Home»Tech News»OpenAI says AI browsers may always be vulnerable to prompt injection attacks
    Tech News

    OpenAI says AI browsers may always be vulnerable to prompt injection attacks

    AwaisBy AwaisDecember 23, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    OpenAI says AI browsers may always be vulnerable to prompt injection attacks
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Even as OpenAI works to harden its Atlas AI browser against cyberattacks, the company admits that prompt injections, a type of attack that manipulates AI agents to follow malicious instructions often hidden in web pages or emails, is a risk that’s not going away anytime soon — raising questions about how safely AI agents can operate on the open web. 

    “Prompt injection, much like scams and social engineering on the web, is unlikely to ever be fully ‘solved,’” OpenAI wrote in a Monday blog post detailing how the firm is beefing up Atlas’ armor to combat the unceasing attacks. The company conceded that “agent mode” in ChatGPT Atlas “expands the security threat surface.”

    OpenAI launched its ChatGPT Atlas browser in October, and security researchers rushed to publish their demos, showing it was possible to write a few words in Google Docs that were capable of changing the underlying browser’s behavior. That same day, Brave published a blog post explaining that indirect prompt injection is a systematic challenge for AI-powered browsers, including Perplexity’s Comet. 

    OpenAI isn’t alone in recognizing that prompt-based injections aren’t going away. The U.K.’s National Cyber Security Centre earlier this month warned that prompt injection attacks against generative AI applications “may never be totally mitigated,” putting websites at risk of falling victim to data breaches. The U.K. government agency advised cyber professionals to reduce the risk and impact of prompt injections, rather than think the attacks can be “stopped.” 

    For OpenAI’s part, the company said: “We view prompt injection as a long-term AI security challenge, and we’ll need to continuously strengthen our defenses against it.”

    The company’s answer to this Sisyphean task? A proactive, rapid-response cycle that the firm says is showing early promise in helping discover novel attack strategies internally before they are exploited “in the wild.” 

    That’s not entirely different from what rivals like Anthropic and Google have been saying: that to fight against the persistent risk of prompt-based attacks, defenses must be layered and continuously stress-tested. Google’s recent work, for example, focuses on architectural and policy-level controls for agentic systems.

    But where OpenAI is taking a different tact is with its “LLM-based automated attacker.” This attacker is basically a bot that OpenAI trained, using reinforcement learning, to play the role of a hacker that looks for ways to sneak malicious instructions to an AI agent.

    The bot can test the attack in simulation before using it for real, and the simulator shows how the target AI would think and what actions it would take if it saw the attack. The bot can then study that response, tweak the attack, and try again and again. That insight into the target AI’s internal reasoning is something outsiders don’t have access to, so, in theory, OpenAI’s bot should be able to find flaws faster than a real-world attacker would. 

    It’s a common tactic in AI safety testing: build an agent to find the edge cases and test against them rapidly in simulation. 

    “Our [reinforcement learning]-trained attacker can steer an agent into executing sophisticated, long-horizon harmful workflows that unfold over tens (or even hundreds) of steps,” wrote OpenAI. “We also observed novel attack strategies that did not appear in our human red teaming campaign or external reports.”

    a screenshot showing a prompt injection attack in an OpenAI browser.
    Image Credits:OpenAI

    In a demo (pictured in part above), OpenAI showed how its automated attacker slipped a malicious email into a user’s inbox. When the AI agent later scanned the inbox, it followed the hidden instructions in the email and sent a resignation message instead of drafting an out-of-office reply. But following the security update, “agent mode” was able to successfully detect the prompt injection attempt and flag it to the user, according to the company. 

    The company says that while prompt injection is hard to secure against in a foolproof way, it’s leaning on large-scale testing and faster patch cycles to harden its systems before they show up in real-world attacks. 

    An OpenAI spokesperson declined to share whether the update to Atlas’ security has resulted in a measurable reduction in successful injections, but says the firm has been working with third parties to harden Atlas against prompt injection since before launch.

    Rami McCarthy, principal security researcher at cybersecurity firm Wiz, says that reinforcement learning is one way to continuously adapt to attacker behavior, but it’s only part of the picture. 

    “A useful way to reason about risk in AI systems is autonomy multiplied by access,” McCarthy told TechCrunch.

    “Agentic browsers tend to sit in a challenging part of that space: moderate autonomy combined with very high access,” said McCarthy. “Many current recommendations reflect that trade-off. Limiting logged-in access primarily reduces exposure, while requiring review of confirmation requests constrains autonomy.”

    Those are two of OpenAI’s recommendations for users to reduce their own risk, and a spokesperson said Atlas is also trained to get user confirmation before sending messages or making payments. OpenAI also suggests that users give agents specific instructions, rather than providing them access to your inbox and telling them to “take whatever action is needed.” 

    “Wide latitude makes it easier for hidden or malicious content to influence the agent, even when safeguards are in place,” per OpenAI.

    While OpenAI says protecting Atlas users against prompt injections is a top priority, McCarthy invites some skepticism as to the return on investment for risk-prone browsers. 

    “For most everyday use cases, agentic browsers don’t yet deliver enough value to justify their current risk profile,” McCarthy told TechCrunch. “The risk is high given their access to sensitive data like email and payment information, even though that access is also what makes them powerful. That balance will evolve, but today the trade-offs are still very real.”

    Attacks Browsers injection OpenAI Prompt vulnerable
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Awais
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Beyond Prompt Caching: 5 More Things You Should Cache in RAG Pipelines

    March 19, 2026

    Prompt Volume Shouldn’t Drive Strategy

    March 18, 2026

    OpenAI tests Ads Manager as ChatGPT ad business takes shape

    March 16, 2026

    Why Care About Prompt Caching in LLMs?

    March 13, 2026

    OpenAI updates privacy policy as ads expand in ChatGPT

    March 9, 2026

    [2601.02751] Window-based Membership Inference Attacks Against Fine-tuned Large Language Models

    March 9, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    At Least 32 People Dead After a Mine Bridge Collapsed Due to Overcrowding

    November 17, 20250 Views

    Here’s how I turned a Raspberry Pi into an in-car media server

    November 17, 20250 Views

    Beloved SF cat’s death fuels Waymo criticism

    November 17, 20250 Views
    Don't Miss

    GSI Agent: Domain Knowledge Enhancement for Large Language Models in Green Stormwater Infrastructure

    March 19, 2026

    arXiv:2603.15643v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Green Stormwater Infrastructure (GSI) systems, such as permeable pavement, rain…

    ChatGPT checkout converted 3x worse than website

    March 19, 2026

    Beyond Prompt Caching: 5 More Things You Should Cache in RAG Pipelines

    March 19, 2026

    How to create a dropdown list in Google Sheets

    March 19, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Google Expands UCP With Cart, Catalog, Onboarding

    March 19, 2026

    Make.com pricing: Is it worth it? [2026]

    March 19, 2026
    Most Popular

    13 Trending Songs on TikTok in Nov 2025 (+ How to Use Them)

    November 18, 20257 Views

    How to watch the 2026 GRAMMY Awards online from anywhere

    February 1, 20263 Views

    Corporate Reputation Management Strategies | Sprout Social

    November 19, 20252 Views
    Our Picks

    At Least 32 People Dead After a Mine Bridge Collapsed Due to Overcrowding

    November 17, 2025

    Here’s how I turned a Raspberry Pi into an in-car media server

    November 17, 2025

    Beloved SF cat’s death fuels Waymo criticism

    November 17, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    © 2025 skytik.cc. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.