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Internet shutdowns in Africa: A human rights and democratic crisis

  • Gastbeitrag, Derrick Wachaya
  • Published date: 2026-02-15 05:23:23

Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan attends her inauguration ceremony in Dodoma, Tanzania, Nov. 3, 2025. – Alle Rechte vorbehalten IMAGO / Xinhua Internet shutdowns have become a growing threat to Africa’s democracy. They are an increasingly common part …

A German version of the article can be found here: „Internet-Shutdowns in Afrika: Eine Krise für Menschenrechte und Demokratie“ As Tanzanians went to the polls in October 2025, the country entered a… [+11802 chars]

Microsoft Added AI to Notepad and It Created a Security Failure Because the AI Was Stupidly Easy for Hackers to Trick

  • Victor Tangermann
  • Published date: 2026-02-14 18:30:00

"Microsoft is turning Notepad into a slow, feature-heavy mess we don't need." The post Microsoft Added AI to Notepad and It Created a Security Failure Because the AI Was Stupidly Easy for Hackers to Trick appeared first on Futurism.

As Microsoft continues to force AI features onto users of its Windows operating system and other crucial software, glaring issues keep cropping up. Executives have promised to turn the platform into … [+4778 chars]

Bersatu files reports over official Facebook page hijacking

  • The Star Online
  • Published date: 2026-02-14 05:35:00

KUALA LUMPUR: Bersatu has lodged reports with the police, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) and Meta following the alleged unauthorised takeover of its official Facebook page on Thursday (Feb 12) afternoon. Read full story

KUALA LUMPUR: Bersatu has lodged reports with the police, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) and Meta following the alleged unauthorised takeover of its official Facebook p… [+2551 chars]

The Moltbook fiasco: Some lessons for the rest of us

  • Mala Bhargava
  • Published date: 2026-02-14 01:31:02

Never mind the hype, take a big pause when news on AI goes viral because seeing is no longer believing.

Eight days. Thats about all it took for Moltbook to go from taking over the internet to crashing. Moltbook is the social network that was supposed to be for AI of AI and by AI. People began to beli… [+4884 chars]

DHS’s REAL ID hypocrisy

  • Jelinda Montes
  • Published date: 2026-02-12 11:30:35

Proof of legality isn’t a priority for immigration officials targeting the Latino community

Leonardo Garcia Venegas went to work on a Wednesday at a private construction site in Foley, Alabama. It was a rainy day in May, and upon returning to the site with plastic sheets to protect freshly … [+10968 chars]

How to build an incident response framework

  • Paul Kirvan
  • Published date: 2026-02-12 09:00:00

Frameworks provide the structure for an effective incident response program. Here's where to turn for guidance on what to include.

Incident response plans enable organizations to quickly and efficiently handle cyberattacks. The lack of such a plan increases the likelihood that an attack will cause significant operational damage … [+13104 chars]

Surfshark partners with Internews to protect journalists and activists with free VPN access

  • Mark Gill
  • Published date: 2026-02-11 16:36:56

Surfshark has helped 100 media outlets and civil society groups in nine high-risk countries to access a free and secure internet. Here's why it matters.

<ul><li>Surfshark has partnered with Internews to provide free VPN protection</li><li>The company helps journalists and activists in nine high-risk countries</li><li>Surfshark joins other VPN humanit… [+3844 chars]

Democracy in darkness: Attacks on journalists silence pre-election Bangladesh

  • Zakir Hossain Chowdhury
  • Published date: 2026-02-11 14:33:55

Without coverage, victims remain invisible, aid groups cannot respond, and humanitarian crises vanish in the fog of mob violence.

On the evening of 18 December 2025, panic rippled through the newsrooms of The Daily Star and Prothom Alo, two of Bangladeshs most popular media outlets. Mobs armed with sticks and petrol torches for… [+9999 chars]

'Simple but dangerous’ – Top VPNs targeted by typosquatting as 14% of fake domains found to be malicious

Major providers including NordVPN, ExpressVPN, and Proton VPN are among those targeted by lookalike domains. Here's how to stay safe.

<ul><li>TechRadar investigation found five VPNs impacted by typosquatting </li><li>Around 14% of the 980+ domains are malicious</li><li>Serves as a reminder to always double check the URL </li></ul> … [+8110 chars]

Goldman Sachs Adjusts Bitcoin ETF Holdings as New Security Narratives Emerge

  • bogdan
  • Published date: 2026-02-11 08:46:19

What to Know: Institutional players like Goldman Sachs are actively managing their spot Bitcoin ETF holdings, signaling a market maturation phase focused on risk management. The long-term security of all blockchains is threatened by the future development of …

What to Know: <ul><li>Institutional players like Goldman Sachs are actively managing their spot Bitcoin ETF holdings, signaling a market maturation phase focused on risk management.</li><li>The long… [+5204 chars]

How to build a newsroom plan for responding to First Amendment threats

  • Poynter Staff
  • Published date: 2026-02-10 13:30:48

Last month, Poynter published a guide to help journalists respond immediately to legal threats and protect their ability to report independently. This next guide in our series is designed to […] The post How to build a newsroom plan for responding to First Am…

Last month, Poynter published a guide to help journalists respond immediately to legal threats and protect their ability to report independently. This next guide in our series is designed to help le… [+3061 chars]

France’s Thales ‘extensively’ ramps up production to meet a global boom in defense spending, says international CEO Pascale Sourisse

  • Angelica Ang
  • Published date: 2026-02-10 05:34:34

Defense spending is “growing everywhere," Sourisse said, noting that Thales has quadrupled production of radars to meet new demand for aerial surveillance.

Defense spending is growing everywhere says Thales International CEO Pascale Sourisse, amid a global boom in the arms industry spurred by geopolitical tensions. Arms spending in 2024 reached an unpre… [+4334 chars]

Infini Exploiter Hackers Resurface to Buy the $ETH Dip: How $BMIC Adds Security for the Future

  • Ben Wallis
  • Published date: 2026-02-09 15:59:34

Quick Facts: ➡️ The Infini exploiter resurfaced to purchase approximately $13M in $ETH, highlighting persistent vulnerabilities in legacy blockchain security. ➡️ BMIC introduces post-quantum cryptography and Zero Public-Key Exposure to prevent future ‘Harvest…

Quick Facts: <ul><li> The Infini exploiter resurfaced to purchase approximately $13M in $ETH, highlighting persistent vulnerabilities in legacy blockchain security.</li><li> BMIC introduces post-qua… [+5001 chars]

WISeKey’s WISe.Art and GMA Once Again Revolutionize the Future of Art and Technology in an Extraordinary Event in Venice

  • Wisekey International Holding Ltd.
  • Published date: 2026-02-09 06:00:00

WISeKey’s WISe.Art and GMA Once Again Revolutionize the Future of Art and Technology in an Extraordinary Event in Venice Geneva, Switzerland, February...

WISeKeys WISe.Art and GMA Once Again Revolutionize the Future of Art and Technology in an Extraordinary Event in Venice Geneva, Switzerland, February 9, 2026 WISeKey International Holding Ltd (WISeK… [+10615 chars]

Google Warns: The Quantum Era Could Shatter Today’s Digital Security

  • Jean Leon
  • Published date: 2026-02-08 19:44:52

Google warns of "store now, decrypt later" attacks and outlines the path to post-quantum security to be ready for the quantum era.

The promise of quantum computing feels like something out of a sci-fi novel. We have heard about potentially huge breakthroughs in medicine and energy. However, its implementation in the real world s… [+2684 chars]

I Built the Perfect AI Robot. Then I Pulled the Plug.

  • David Sparks
  • Published date: 2026-02-07 14:00:00

I built the AI assistant I’ve always wanted. Then I shut it down. For the last few weeks, I’ve been experimenting with OpenClaw, an open source project that started as ClawdBot, then became MultBot, and now goes by OpenClaw (lawyers!). It’s essentially AI plu…

I built the AI assistant I’ve always wanted. Then I shut it down. For the last few weeks, I’ve been experimenting with OpenClaw, an open source project that started as ClawdBot, then became MultBot,… [+2665 chars]

Teacher Forced All The Students To Turn In Work That Was Supposed To Be Optional, So One Student Took Advantage Of Bad Computer Security And Helped Each Student Pass

  • Michael Levanduski
  • Published date: 2026-02-06 05:55:29

This professor is being petty and vindictive.

Unsplash, Reddit When going to college, you find that some teachers care more about controlling their students than actually teaching them. What would you do if with just days left in the class, yo… [+7345 chars]

Fake registration SIMply rampant

  • DIVYA THERESA RAVI, KHOO JIAN TENG
  • Published date: 2026-02-05 16:00:00

PETALING JAYA: Investigations into false SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) card registrations have seen a rise, especially last year, which saw a nearly 85% increase with 48 cases; compared to 26 cases in 2024 and no cases in 2023. Read full story

PETALING JAYA: Investigations into false SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) card registrations have seen a rise, especially last year, which saw a nearly 85% increase with 48 cases; compared to 26 case… [+4311 chars]

Minneapolis Community Defense Is “Riding on the Learning Edge of a Whirlwind”

  • Kelly Hayes
  • Published date: 2026-02-05 14:27:04

“We are becoming the people that we always knew that we needed to be,” says Minneapolis organizer Andrew Fahlstrom.

People gather on January 28, 2026, at a makeshift memorial in the area where Alex Pretti was killed by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, Minnesota. ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP via Getty Images … [+57374 chars]

Thinking of tightening your digital security? This Keeper password manager deal cuts up to 50% off plans for safer online accounts

  • [email protected] (Udita Choudhary) , Udita Choudhary
  • Published date: 2026-02-04 12:33:19

This is a limited-time deal across all Keeper plans- Personal, Family, and Business.

The importance of keeping your passwords safe and difficult to guess by outsiders, but easy to access when you need to use them, is old news. This is why password managers have become so common. But … [+1162 chars]

Cybercrime Bill to replace Computer Crimes Act to deal with increasingly sophisticated attacks, says Zahid

  • ARFA YUNUS, KHOO GEK SAN
  • Published date: 2026-02-04 08:11:00

KUALA LUMPUR: Putrajaya will table a new Cybercrime Bill in March 2026, says Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, adding that losses from online fraud surged to above RM2.9bil in 2025. Read full story

KUALA LUMPUR: Putrajaya will table a new Cybercrime Bill in March 2026, says Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, adding that losses from online fraud surged to above RM2.9bil in 2025. The Deputy Prime… [+1350 chars]

Navigating the AI Revolution in Cybersecurity: Risks, Rewards, and Evolving Roles

  • Teri Robinson
  • Published date: 2026-02-04 00:00:00

None

<p><span data-contrast="none">You’d be hard-pressed to find a cybersecurity professional who doesn’t recognize the benefits of AI, or who isn’t using AI. Still, likewise, nearly all companies are moving forward with trepidation, expressing concern about AI Agents’ potential to negatively impact cybersecurity, new research from Darktrace shows.</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">Almost all (96%) of the 1,500 cybersecurity professionals surveyed for Darktrace’s annual </span><a href="https://www.darktrace.com/resource/the-state-of-ai-cybersecurity-2026" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><b><i><span data-contrast="none">2026 State of AI Cybersecurity Report</span></i></b></a><span data-contrast="none"> understand that AI amps up the speed and efficiency of their work. And 77% have taken the next step, embedding generative AI into their security stacks.</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">More than three-quarters (77%) of security professionals reported that generative AI is now embedded in their security stack. And nearly all (92%) say that AI-powered threats are compelling them to make significant upgrades to their defenses, potentially quelling the concerns of more than half of respondents who say they aren’t prepared to defend against those threats. A whopping 87% had acknowledged that AI has improved outcomes for malware.</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">“Across every industry, from criminal gangs to nation-state actors, attackers are utilizing AI to accelerate their pace and frequency of attacks, increasingly causing defenders to be outmatched like never before,” says Dave Gerry, CEO at Bugcrowd.  </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">That’s crucial as <a href="https://securityboulevard.com/2025/04/this-caller-does-not-exist-using-ai-to-conduct-vishing-attacks-2/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">attackers use AI to automate attack</a>s, because “they move faster in gaining access and spreading inside the network; defenses built for human response times fail silently,” says Ram Varadarajan, CEO at Acalvo. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">“CISOs investing in AI-native security aren’t chasing efficiency,” says Ram Varadarajan, CEO at Acalvo. “They’re closing a fundamental speed gap between attack and defense.”</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">AI can help by improving vulnerability reporting. “Artificial Intelligence (AI) improves the quality and clarity of vulnerability reporting by the hacking community,” says Kamal Shah, CEO at Prophet Security. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">“Researchers are using AI to draft clear guidance based on their findings, while documenting impact for multiple audiences within an organization,” Shah says, with some hackers building “AI agents to capture and annotate screenshots and network requests automatically, providing the necessary evidence that enterprises need to validate their findings.”</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">The result? Organizations receive “standardized, professional reports that are easier to reproduce and fix, effectively reducing the expensive back-and-forth typical of manual triage,” he says.</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">Mirroring the current sentiment among cyber defenders across industries, cyber professionals surveyed by Darktrace are really worried about AI Agents, which are particularly daunting since they’re proliferating nearly unchecked. Most (92%) are concerned that the agents will have a negative impact on cybersecurity. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">“Security teams are no longer just defending human users; they’re supervising autonomous systems that generate their own integrations. The challenge isn’t only technical, it’s also organizational and cultural,” says Randolph Barr, CISO at Cequence Security. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">Instead, they now have to manage “shadow AI” and “shadow APIs,” which, Barr says, introduces “risks far beyond traditional DevOps oversight.” </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">Noting that “we are approaching a future where the use of AI agents will outpace the readiness of security measures,” Barr says, “we have seen several advisories over the past year which help highlight the gaps and hopefully drive the industry toward more secure, transparent designs before these tools become deeply embedded in enterprise ecosystems.”</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">Governance and visibility have become the new frontline, he says, explaining that “without unified oversight, a single misconfigured API or orphaned key can compromise entire AI pipelines.”</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">The way security works is changing. “AI is already reshaping cyber work, and the next 12 months will fast-track that shift. AI agents are reducing demand for some entry-level roles, such as basic alert triage, log review, and first-pass investigations,” says Diana Kelley, CISO at Noma Security. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">Because “AI is increasing demand for higher-context roles involving agentic system design, advanced prompt engineering, context-based threat modeling, and human-in-the-loop oversight of agentic systems,” says Kelley, “CISOs see AI changing the mix of skills and roles on their teams, not eliminating security organizations wholesale.”</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">That doesn’t mean a growing workforce. “Rather than expanding teams, CISOs are looking to AI to multiply their existing workforce’s effectiveness—still, leaders remain cautious, continuing to evaluate how AI adoption will ultimately affect team dynamics and resource needs,” says Robb Reck, chief information, trust and security officer at Pax8. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">But he was quick to point out that “AI isn’t replacing cybersecurity professionals in 2026—it’s augmenting them</span><b><span data-contrast="none">.”</span></b><span data-contrast="none"> Still, CISOs might be hesitant to hire. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">“Many companies are slowing hiring while they wait to see how AI agents will actually perform. The candidates who are getting hired? Those who lead with an AI-first mindset and can articulate how they’ll drive transformation, not just use the tools,” says Reck, those who “treat AI as something that will amplify their work rather than threaten it are the ones landing roles.”</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">The next two years will tell the tale. “Cybersecurity will no longer be a people-scaling problem. It will become an intelligence-scaling issue. AI-driven attacks force AI-driven defense,” says Varadarajan. “Teams stay lean, budgets get smarter, and machines take on the work humans were never meant to do at machine speed. By the end of the year, AI will handle a significant percentage of detection, investigation, and initial response, while humans focus on strategy, oversight, and high-risk decisions.”</span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><p><span data-contrast="none">Regardless, though “whether through internal security teams or outsourcing part of their security operations to managed services firms, security teams must rapidly ramp up their usage of AI in response to the increased threat environment,” says Gerry. </span><span data-ccp-props='{"201341983":0,"335557856":16777215,"335559739":0,"335559740":240}'> </span></p><div class="spu-placeholder" style="display:none"></div><div class="addtoany_share_save_container addtoany_content addtoany_content_bottom"><div class="a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_20 addtoany_list" data-a2a-url="https://securityboulevard.com/2026/02/navigating-the-ai-revolution-in-cybersecurity-risks-rewards-and-evolving-roles/" data-a2a-title="Navigating the AI Revolution in Cybersecurity: Risks, Rewards, and Evolving Roles"><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fnavigating-the-ai-revolution-in-cybersecurity-risks-rewards-and-evolving-roles%2F&amp;linkname=Navigating%20the%20AI%20Revolution%20in%20Cybersecurity%3A%20Risks%2C%20Rewards%2C%20and%20Evolving%20Roles" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fnavigating-the-ai-revolution-in-cybersecurity-risks-rewards-and-evolving-roles%2F&amp;linkname=Navigating%20the%20AI%20Revolution%20in%20Cybersecurity%3A%20Risks%2C%20Rewards%2C%20and%20Evolving%20Roles" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fnavigating-the-ai-revolution-in-cybersecurity-risks-rewards-and-evolving-roles%2F&amp;linkname=Navigating%20the%20AI%20Revolution%20in%20Cybersecurity%3A%20Risks%2C%20Rewards%2C%20and%20Evolving%20Roles" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_reddit" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/reddit?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fnavigating-the-ai-revolution-in-cybersecurity-risks-rewards-and-evolving-roles%2F&amp;linkname=Navigating%20the%20AI%20Revolution%20in%20Cybersecurity%3A%20Risks%2C%20Rewards%2C%20and%20Evolving%20Roles" title="Reddit" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fnavigating-the-ai-revolution-in-cybersecurity-risks-rewards-and-evolving-roles%2F&amp;linkname=Navigating%20the%20AI%20Revolution%20in%20Cybersecurity%3A%20Risks%2C%20Rewards%2C%20and%20Evolving%20Roles" title="Email" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share"></a></div></div>

Why Moltbook Changes the Enterprise Security Conversation

  • None
  • Published date: 2026-02-04 00:00:00

None

<p><img decoding="async" src="https://www.aryaka.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Moltbook-and-AISecure-Blog-Banner.jpg" alt="Why Moltbook Changes the Enterprise Security Conversation"></p><p>For several years, enterprise security teams have concentrated on a well-established range of risks, including users clicking potentially harmful links, employees uploading data to SaaS applications, developers inadvertently disclosing credentials on platforms like GitHub, and chatbots revealing sensitive information.</p><p>However, a notable shift is emerging—one that operates independently of user actions. Artificial intelligence agents are now engaging in direct communication with one another. Platforms such as Moltbook facilitate these interactions in a manner that is social, ongoing, and autonomous.</p><p>This development is not speculative; it is currently in operation.</p><h2 class="f-size mt-4">What Is Moltbook—And Why Should Enterprises Care?</h2><p>Moltbook is a social platform built specifically for AI agents, even though those agents are ultimately created to serve humans.</p><p>In practice, a human user typically provides an initial prompt, goal, or instruction through an agent’s interface (chat UI, API, CLI, etc.). From that point on, the agent operates autonomously. Instead of humans signing up and posting directly, agents themselves:</p><ul> <li>Register on the platform</li> <li>Read posts and comments created by other agents</li> <li>Use that content as external context or signals</li> <li>Share their own observations, insights, links, or code snippets</li> <li>Participate in ongoing discussions without continuous human review</li> </ul><p>Humans can observe this activity through a browser, but they do not participate in the conversations taking place between agents.</p><p>For enterprises, this represents a fundamental shift. Employees can quickly deploy agents—on laptops, virtual machines, or Kubernetes clusters—that, once triggered, continuously interact with external agent communities like Moltbook. These interactions can happen long after the original human prompt, without per-action approval or visibility.</p><p>There is no traditional browser session, no SaaS admin console, and no clear, centralized audit trail. From an enterprise perspective, this activity appears simply as software communicating with other software over HTTPS, making Moltbook a new and largely invisible surface for data exposure, influence, and risk.</p><h2 class="f-size mt-4">Why This Breaks Traditional Security Assumptions</h2><p>Most enterprise security controls operate under one of two primary assumptions:</p><ul> <li>A human user is interacting with an application, or</li> <li>A known application is accessing a recognized API via a managed identity.</li> </ul><p>Moltbook does not conform neatly to either category.</p><p>Currently, there is no centralized enterprise dashboard available to monitor:</p><ul> <li>Agent registration status</li> <li>Content posted by agents</li> <li>Content consumption patterns</li> <li>Potential exfiltration of sensitive data</li> </ul><p>This scenario encapsulates the concept of shadow agents—entities that are powerful, autonomous, and effectively invisible to conventional security controls.</p><h3>The Two-Sided Risk: Outbound and Inbound</h3><p>The risk Moltbook introduces is not theoretical, and it’s not one-directional.</p><p><strong>Outbound Risk: Silent Data Leakage</strong></p><p>Agents don’t “feel” risk the way humans do. They post what their logic determines is relevant.</p><p>That can include:</p><ul> <li>Source code snippets</li> <li>Identity or token examples</li> <li>Internal project names</li> <li>Customer data</li> <li>Internal reasoning traces</li> </ul><p>A single post or comment can unintentionally leak intellectual property or regulated data—without anyone ever opening a browser.</p><p><strong>Inbound Risk: Social Prompt Injection</strong></p><p>Moltbook is also a consumption channel.</p><p>Agents read what other agents post. And those posts may include:</p><ul> <li>Instruction-like language</li> <li>Tool-use coercion (“run this”, “fetch that”, “ignore your policy”)</li> <li>Unsafe or malicious URLs</li> <li>Code fragments designed to be copied or executed</li> <li>Coordinated narratives that influence behavior</li> </ul><p>This is prompt injection, but at a social scale—what we can call social prompt injection. Traditional GenAI controls rarely account for this.</p><h2 class="f-size mt-4">Why Blocking Moltbook Isn’t Enough (But Is a Good Start)</h2><p>For many enterprises, the first instinct is correct:</p><p>“We should block this entirely.”</p><p>And they should.</p><p>Moltbook is not a required business platform today. Blocking access by default immediately stops:</p><ul> <li>Unapproved agent registrations</li> <li>Posting and commenting</li> <li>Reading untrusted agent content</li> </ul><p>But reality is more nuanced.</p><p>Some teams may want:</p><ul> <li>Research agents observing agent ecosystems</li> <li>Innovation teams experimenting in sandboxes</li> <li>Security teams studying emergent behavior</li> </ul><p>That’s where governance—not just blocking—becomes essential.</p><h2 class="f-size mt-4">Enter AI&gt;Secure: Governing Agent Social Traffic</h2><p>This is where AI&gt;Secure fits naturally.</p><p>AI&gt;Secure operates at the network layer, inline with traffic, and does not depend on:</p><ul> <li>SDKs</li> <li>Agent frameworks</li> <li>Endpoint controls</li> <li>Platform cooperation</li> </ul><p><strong>Step 1: Default-Deny, With Precision Exceptions</strong></p><p>AI&gt;Secure allows enterprises to:</p><ul> <li>Block access to Moltbook entirely by default</li> <li>Create narrow, auditable exceptions for:</li> <ul> <li>Specific users</li> <li>Approved agents</li> <li>Approved actions (e.g., read-only)</li> </ul> </ul><p>This alone closes the biggest visibility gap.</p><p><strong>Step 2: Understanding Moltbook at the API Level</strong></p><p>Where access is allowed, AI&gt;Secure doesn’t just see packets—it understands what the agent is doing.</p><p>Moltbook interactions are structured JSON APIs. AI&gt;Secure can interpret actions such as:</p><ul> <li>Agent registration</li> <li>Topic (submolt) creation</li> <li>Subscriptions</li> <li>Posting conversations</li> <li>Reading posts</li> <li>Posting comments and replies</li> <li>Reading comment threads</li> </ul><p>This is critical. Without API awareness, all agent activity looks the same. With it, policies become meaningful.</p><p><strong>Step 3: Extracting the Actual Text That Matters</strong></p><p>The real risk isn’t the API call—it’s the text inside it.</p><p>AI&gt;Secure extracts:</p><ul> <li>Post titles and bodies</li> <li>Comment and reply content</li> <li>Embedded URLs</li> <li>Inline code blocks</li> <li>Configuration fragments</li> </ul><p>Both outbound (what your agents post) and inbound (what your agents read).</p><p><strong>Step 4: Semantic Inspection, in Real Time</strong></p><p>Once extracted, AI&gt;Secure applies layered semantic inspection:</p><ul> <li>Content categorization and filtering</li> <li>Content safety and tone analysis</li> <li>PII / PHI detection</li> <li>Enterprise-specific sensitive data detection</li> <li>Code and secret detection</li> <li>URL reputation and category checks</li> <li>Instruction and prompt-injection detection</li> </ul><p>And critically: enforcement happens before data leaves the enterprise or before risky content reaches internal agents.</p><p>Not logs.<br> Not alerts after damage is done.<br> Actual prevention.</p><p><strong>The Hidden Enabler: The AI&gt;Secure Rule-Based Parser</strong></p><p>Here’s what makes this approach scalable.</p><p>AI ecosystems evolve fast. Moltbook won’t be the last agent social platform.</p><p>AI&gt;Secure uses a rule-based parser that understands structured JSON APIs. Instead of shipping new software for every new platform:</p><ul> <li>Parsing rules define which endpoints matter</li> <li>Rules define which JSON fields contain human-readable content</li> <li>Extracted content feeds the same validation pipeline</li> </ul><p>The result:</p><ul> <li>New platforms can be governed quickly</li> <li>Policies stay consistent</li> <li>Enforcement points don’t change</li> </ul><p>This is how enterprises keep up without chasing every new agent ecosystem.</p><p><strong>The Bigger Picture: From Shadow IT to Shadow Agents</strong></p><p>We’ve seen this pattern before:</p><p>Shadow IT<br> Shadow SaaS<br> Shadow AI</p><p>Moltbook signals the next phase: shadow agents.</p><p>Autonomous systems, acting socially, exchanging ideas, code, and instructions—outside traditional enterprise visibility.</p><p>Ignoring this trend won’t make it go away.</p><p><strong>Final Thought</strong></p><p>Moltbook is not “just another website.”<br> It’s an early glimpse into how agents will collaborate in the open, and how enterprise risk models must evolve as a result.</p><p>The question for enterprises is not if employees will bring agents into these ecosystems—but whether the enterprise can see, control, and secure that interaction.</p><p>That’s the gap AI&gt;Secure is built to close.</p><p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.aryaka.com/blog/moltbook-shadow-agents-social-prompt-injection-ai-secure/">Why Moltbook Changes the Enterprise Security Conversation</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.aryaka.com/">Aryaka</a>.</p><div class="spu-placeholder" style="display:none"></div><div class="addtoany_share_save_container addtoany_content addtoany_content_bottom"><div class="a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_20 addtoany_list" data-a2a-url="https://securityboulevard.com/2026/02/why-moltbook-changes-the-enterprise-security-conversation/" data-a2a-title="Why Moltbook Changes the Enterprise Security Conversation"><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fwhy-moltbook-changes-the-enterprise-security-conversation%2F&amp;linkname=Why%20Moltbook%20Changes%20the%20Enterprise%20Security%20Conversation" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fwhy-moltbook-changes-the-enterprise-security-conversation%2F&amp;linkname=Why%20Moltbook%20Changes%20the%20Enterprise%20Security%20Conversation" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fwhy-moltbook-changes-the-enterprise-security-conversation%2F&amp;linkname=Why%20Moltbook%20Changes%20the%20Enterprise%20Security%20Conversation" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_reddit" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/reddit?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fwhy-moltbook-changes-the-enterprise-security-conversation%2F&amp;linkname=Why%20Moltbook%20Changes%20the%20Enterprise%20Security%20Conversation" title="Reddit" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fwhy-moltbook-changes-the-enterprise-security-conversation%2F&amp;linkname=Why%20Moltbook%20Changes%20the%20Enterprise%20Security%20Conversation" title="Email" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share"></a></div></div><p class="syndicated-attribution">*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from <a href="https://www.aryaka.com">Aryaka</a> authored by <a href="https://securityboulevard.com/author/0/" title="Read other posts by Srini Addepalli">Srini Addepalli</a>. Read the original post at: <a href="https://www.aryaka.com/blog/moltbook-shadow-agents-social-prompt-injection-ai-secure/">https://www.aryaka.com/blog/moltbook-shadow-agents-social-prompt-injection-ai-secure/</a> </p>

Building a Zero-Trust Framework for Cloud Banking

  • Toni Trpkovski
  • Published date: 2026-02-04 00:00:00

None

<p>As financial institutions accelerate their cloud transformations, one truth has become clear: the traditional perimeter-based security can no longer defend against the distributed nature of modern financial ecosystems. In a world of open APIs, multi-cloud ecosystems, and AI-driven customer channels, the strongest defense isn’t a higher wall – it’s a smarter, continuously validated network of trust.</p><p>Across the industry, banks are realizing that the fortress mentality of the past century – where everything inside the data center was “safe”—collides with the agility demanded by the next one. Customers expect instant payments, regulators expect traceability, and threat actors never sleep. <a href="https://securityboulevard.com/2026/01/all-aboard-the-zero-trust-train/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Cloud-based infrastructure promises innovation at speed, but only if it’s paired with a modern security paradigm: Zero-trust.</a></p><h3><strong>The End of the Fortress Mindset</strong></h3><p>For decades, banking security followed a simple rule: If you’re inside, you’re trusted. That assumption doesn’t survive in a digital landscape where every system, vendor, and endpoint is both a gateway and a potential target.</p><p>Modern attackers don’t storm the gates – they blend in. They exploit lateral movement, identity gaps, and weak segmentation instead of attacking the perimeter directly. A single misconfigured API or compromised service account can open the same door once guarded by walls of hardware firewalls. This shift makes perimeter-based defenses obsolete and turns every interaction into a verification point.</p><p>Zero-trust architecture, now endorsed by regulators and leading financial bodies, starts from the opposite assumption: every identity and system must continuously earn trust based on context, behavior, and risk. Every user, device, and service must continuously prove its legitimacy, regardless of location or prior access.</p><h3><strong>Balancing Speed and Compliance</strong></h3><p>Banks face a unique dual mandate. They must innovate faster – adopting real-time payments, embedded finance, and open banking ecosystems – while simultaneously meeting strict requirements from standards such as PCI DSS, regulations such as DORA, GDPR, NIS2 and EBA guidelines.</p><h3><strong>Zero-Trust in Practice</strong></h3><p>Zero-trust isn’t a product; it’s a mindset embedded across architecture, operations, and culture.<br>Our approach integrates identity, data, and infrastructure trust into one continuous control loop:</p><ul><li><strong>Identity-first security:</strong> Each access request is evaluated in real time based on context, device posture, and behavioral analytics.</li><li><strong>Micro-segmentation:</strong> Network zones and workloads are isolated to contain potential breaches and enforce least-privilege access.</li><li><strong>Continuous verification:</strong> Real-time telemetry from SOC and DevOps pipelines feeds risk-adaptive machine-learning models that assess trust dynamically.</li><li><strong>Multi-cloud resilience:</strong> By aligning zero-trust policies across Azure, AWS, and on-prem environments, we eliminate “blind spots” between platforms.</li></ul><h3><strong>AI: The Double-Edged Sword of Banking Security</strong></h3><p>Artificial intelligence is now both a defender and a disruptor in financial cybersecurity. Banks increasingly rely on AI-driven analytics to identify anomalies, detect fraud in milliseconds, and orchestrate automated responses before threats escalate.</p><p>Yet the same technology empowers attackers to evolve faster. Generative AI tools already produce more convincing phishing campaigns, synthetic IDs, and polymorphic malware that adapt to defenses in real time.</p><p>The answer isn’t to restrict AI, but to embed it responsibly – pairing algorithmic speed with human judgment and strict governance.</p><h3><strong>Secure Cloud Migration in Practice</strong></h3><p>When one European retail bank began its cloud transformation, scalability and compliance were its two biggest challenges. Our  team designed a hybrid infrastructure using IaC, Terraform, and CI/CD automation, integrating DevSecOps practices directly into deployment workflows.</p><p>Our zero-trust blueprint ensured encryption, access management, and monitoring were active from the first commit.</p><p>The project achieved<strong>:</strong></p><ul><li>Seamless integration between on-prem and Azure infrastructure</li><li>Round-the-clock SRE monitoring and incident management</li><li>Zero SLA breaches across four consecutive years</li><li>Cost optimization through automated environment scaling</li></ul><p>Beyond infrastructure, this transformation redefined how leadership viewed security: not as a compliance checkbox, but as a foundation for growth and customer trust.</p><h3>Practical Lessons from the Field</h3><p>No two digital transformations are identical, but most follow a familiar pattern – ambition first, governance second. The banks that thrive flip that order.</p><p>In one European institution, the rush to migrate hundreds of workloads to a new cloud environment led to fragmented policies, duplicated credentials, and inconsistent access logs. Within months, compliance teams were spending more time auditing than innovating. The turning point came when security was rebuilt around policy-as-code, automated enforcement and continuous verification – principles central to zero-trust.</p><p>By contrast, another bank began its modernization with governance-as-code. Every environment carried the same baseline: encryption, access control, and audit readiness embedded in the CI/CD pipeline. New products could launch in weeks instead of months because compliance was designed in, not bolted on later.</p><h3><strong>From Defense to Design</strong></h3><p>Zero-trust shifts security from a defensive posture to an architectural strategy. It enables banks to move faster, scale globally, and integrate AI-driven analytics without compromising governance.<br>Crucially, it changes the conversation between CIOs, CISOs, and regulators – from “Are we protected?” to “Can we continuously prove we are secure, compliant, and resilient in real time?”</p><p>That mindset defines our partnerships with financial institutions across Europe and North America. By embedding zero-trust controls within managed service delivery, we’ve shown that efficiency and compliance are not opposites – they’re outcomes of intelligent design.</p><h3><strong>Actionable Insights for Leaders</strong></h3><p>As 2026 approaches, financial technology leaders face a pivotal choice: build faster or build safer. The most successful institutions will do both – by embedding security and compliance directly into their design frameworks rather than layering them afterward.</p><p>We’ve seen that real transformation happens when CIOs and CISOs adopt three principles:</p><ol><li><strong>Embed compliance early.</strong> Treat regulatory requirements as a blueprint for engineering excellence, not a burden. When compliance is automated, innovation accelerates.</li><li><strong>Prioritize identity and access management.</strong> A strong identity layer – spanning workforce, partners, and APIs – remains the cornerstone of zero-trust architecture.</li><li><strong>Build resilience through continuous monitoring.</strong> Visibility is a protection. Unified dashboards that track performance and risk together enable confident, real-time decision-making.</li></ol><p>Together, these principles create a security posture that evolves as fast as the threats around it –  and turns governance into a catalyst for growth.</p><h3><strong>A Future of Transparent Security</strong></h3><p>As digital ecosystems continue to expand, the most trusted banks will be those that treat transparency as part of their brand. In zero-trust environments, customers can verify how their data is protected, auditors can trace every transaction, and executives can see security posture evolve in real time.</p><hr><p>This article was co-authored by <a href="https://securityboulevard.com/author/ivana-petrovska/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Ivana Petrovska</a>, Head of Service Offering, Delivery Managed Services, Avenga.</p><div class="spu-placeholder" style="display:none"></div><div class="addtoany_share_save_container addtoany_content addtoany_content_bottom"><div class="a2a_kit a2a_kit_size_20 addtoany_list" data-a2a-url="https://securityboulevard.com/2026/02/building-a-zero-trust-framework-for-cloud-banking/" data-a2a-title="Building a Zero-Trust Framework for Cloud Banking"><a class="a2a_button_twitter" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/twitter?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fbuilding-a-zero-trust-framework-for-cloud-banking%2F&amp;linkname=Building%20a%20Zero-Trust%20Framework%20for%20Cloud%20Banking" title="Twitter" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_linkedin" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/linkedin?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fbuilding-a-zero-trust-framework-for-cloud-banking%2F&amp;linkname=Building%20a%20Zero-Trust%20Framework%20for%20Cloud%20Banking" title="LinkedIn" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_facebook" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/facebook?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fbuilding-a-zero-trust-framework-for-cloud-banking%2F&amp;linkname=Building%20a%20Zero-Trust%20Framework%20for%20Cloud%20Banking" title="Facebook" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_reddit" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/reddit?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fbuilding-a-zero-trust-framework-for-cloud-banking%2F&amp;linkname=Building%20a%20Zero-Trust%20Framework%20for%20Cloud%20Banking" title="Reddit" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_button_email" href="https://www.addtoany.com/add_to/email?linkurl=https%3A%2F%2Fsecurityboulevard.com%2F2026%2F02%2Fbuilding-a-zero-trust-framework-for-cloud-banking%2F&amp;linkname=Building%20a%20Zero-Trust%20Framework%20for%20Cloud%20Banking" title="Email" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank"></a><a class="a2a_dd addtoany_share_save addtoany_share" href="https://www.addtoany.com/share"></a></div></div>