News alert: SquareX exposes how AI browsers fall prey to OAuth hijacks and malware traps
“Just like any AI Agent, AI Browsers are trained to complete tasks, not to be security aware. This makes it trivial for attackers to trick browsers like Comet into performing malicious tasks, by convincing them that it is a necessary part of the workflow they are completing,” warns Vivek Ramachandran, Founder of SquareX.
“With two major consumer browsers publicly announcing their entry to the AI Browser race, it is inevitable that AI Browsers will be the primary way we interact with the internet in the future, ” he adds. “Without the right browser-native solution that can implement guardrails on these AI Browsers that take into account agentic identity and agentic DLP, millions of users will be at risk.”
In the technical blog, SquareX discloses a few ways Comet was exploited, illustrating each with case studies. In one example, in completing a research task, Comet fell prey to an OAuth attack, providing attackers with full access to the victim’s email and Google Drive. This allowed attackers to exfiltrate every file stored on the victim’s account, including those shared by colleagues and customers. In another, the AI browser was completing tasks in the user’s inbox – a common use case advertised by Comet itself – when it ended up distributing a malicious link to the victim’s colleague through a calendar invite. Other examples include tricking Comet into downloading known malwares and emailing sensitive files to attackers.
In a commentary on SquareX’s research, Stephen Bennett, Group CISO at Domino’s Pizza Enterprises Ltd., says “Browsers have always been our universal gateway to the internet. AI browsers are the next logical step where instead of simply displaying information, the browser acts autonomously on our behalf. The trade off? Where we were once firmly in the driving seat, AI browsers will push us to be passengers.”
With the increasing integration of agentic AI into browsers, AI agents may soon dominate browsing activity over human users. This shift necessitates a collaboration between enterprises, browser developers, and cybersecurity companies to create robust security frameworks and protective measures to prevent attackers from exploiting AI Browsers. SquareX’s findings provide a crucial warning about the dangers of relying on traditional solutions to solve modern threats, and hopes to serve as an encouragement for an urgent industry-wide cooperation.
About SquareX: SquareX‘s browser extension turns any browser on any device into an enterprise-grade secure browser, including AI Browsers. SquareX’s industry-first Browser Detection and Response (BDR) solution empowers organizations to proactively defend against browser-native threats including rogue AI agents, Last Mile Reassembly Attacks, malicious extensions and identity attacks. Unlike dedicated enterprise browsers, SquareX seamlessly integrates with users’ existing consumer browsers, delivering security without compromising user experience. More information about SquareX’s research-led innovation is available at www.sqrx.com.
Media contact: Junice Liew, Head of PR, SquareX, junice@sqrx.com
Editor’s note: This press release was provided by CyberNewswire as part of its press release syndication service. The views and claims expressed belong to the issuing organization.
The post News alert: SquareX exposes how AI browsers fall prey to OAuth hijacks and malware traps first appeared on The Last Watchdog.
This thing is poised to eat their lunch. | Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales /…
Destiny fans are lamenting the future of Bungie's sci-fi shooter franchise, following a threadbare update…
CD Projekt has insisted it has “no plans” for further Cyberpunk 2077 DLCs or expansions…
The post GFiber & Stonepeak’s Astound Broadband To Merge appeared first on TV News Check.
The post Disney+ Goes Vertical With Verts appeared first on TV News Check.
HuskerVision, the University of Nebraska’s athletic production unit, has completed the second phase of a…
This website uses cookies.