Tech

Microsoft Copilot targeted in first “zero-click” attack on an AI agent – what you need to know

Share
Share


  • Security researchers Aim Labs discovered an LLM Scope Violation flaw in Microsoft 365 Copilot
  • The critical-severity bug allows threat actors to exfiltrate sensitive corporate data by sending an email
  • Microsoft says it has fixed the issue server-side, but users should be on guard

Microsoft has fixed a dangerous zero-click attack in its Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) model which could have allowed threat actors to silently exfiltrate sensitive corporate data without (almost) any user interaction.

Cybersecurity researchers Aim Labs, who found the flaw, known as an “LLM Scope Violation”, and dubbed it EchoLeak.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles
Researcher explores visual media through the lens of machine vision
Tech

Researcher explores visual media through the lens of machine vision

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Large visual collections, such as paintings, photographs, drawings,...

Predicting post-disaster waste disposal times to improve resilience to tsunamis and earthquakes
Tech

Predicting post-disaster waste disposal times to improve resilience to tsunamis and earthquakes

This infographic visually summarizes the research background and the proposed framework, which...

This cyberattack lets hackers crack AI models just by changing a single character
Tech

This cyberattack lets hackers crack AI models just by changing a single character

Researchers from HiddenLayer devised a new LLM attack called TokenBreaker By adding,...