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Hacking Wheelchairs over Bluetooth

Researchers have demonstrated remotely controlling a wheelchair over Bluetooth. CISA has issued an advisory.

CISA said the WHILL wheelchairs did not enforce authentication for Bluetooth connections, allowing an attacker who is in Bluetooth range of the targeted device to pair with it. The attacker could then control the wheelchair’s movements, override speed restrictions, and manipulate configuration profiles, all without requiring credentials or user interaction.

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Researchers Null-Route Over 550 Kimwolf and Aisuru Botnet Command Servers

The Black Lotus Labs team at Lumen Technologies said it null-routed traffic to more than 550 command-and-control (C2) nodes associated with the AISURU/Kimwolf botnet since early October 2025. AISURU and its Android counterpart, Kimwolf, have emerged as some of the biggest botnets in recent times, capable of directing enslaved devices to participate in distributed denial-of-service (DDoS)

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Building effective AI for the SOC: How Intezer Forensic AI SOC follows Anthropic’s best practices

One of the most influential publications on real-world AI system design is Anthropic’s guide, Building Effective Agents. Its core message is simple:
Effective AI requires structure first, adaptability second.

Anthropic emphasizes that AI agents work best when:

  1. A deterministic workflow does all the structured work up front
  2. The agent only activates when uncertainty remains
  3. The agent begins with full context, not an empty slate
  4. Tool usage is controlled and evidence-driven
  5. Human-in-the-loop remains central for oversight and trust

These principles ensure accuracy, avoid hallucinations and keep investigations reproducible, all critical requirements for cybersecurity.

Intezer Forensic AI SOC is built on exactly this philosophy. Our platform uses a dual-mode design with Intezer AI Workflow and AI Agent, completely aligning with Anthropic’s best practices to deliver fast, scalable and highly accurate investigations across a broad range of alerts, all while keeping analysts in the loop.

Here is how Intezer implements Anthropic’s best practices for agents.

Structured first: Intezer AI Workflow handles the majority of alerts

Anthropic advises that AI systems should begin with deterministic workflows instead of free-form reasoning. In cybersecurity, this is essential for accuracy, auditability, trust and scalability (when handling huge volumes of alerts).

Intezer’s AI Workflow mode is a structured triage process designed by security experts and executed with strict consistency. It applies AI only at key decision points, not as the driver of the entire investigation.

This approach provides:

  • Deterministic, reproducible results
  • High speed due to streamlined, parallelizable steps
  • Lower costs because heavy reasoning is used sparingly
  • No drift or unexpected branching
  • Clear human oversight points

Most alerts, especially well-defined ones, are fully resolved at this stage, giving SOCs broad alert coverage at low cost.

Adaptive only when needed: Intezer AI Agent extends the investigation

Anthropic states that agents should activate only when the structured workflow reaches uncertainty, and only after they inherit the full context. Intezer follows this exactly.

AI Agent mode activates only when the Workflow cannot reach a high-confidence verdict.

At that point, the agent:

  • Starts with all evidence collected so far
  • Avoids premature assumptions
  • Uses tools deliberately and contextually
  • Expands the investigation where human analysts would
  • Surfaces deeper behavioral patterns or cross-asset correlations

This ensures the agent is guided, not free-floating, and its decisions remain grounded in evidence, not guesswork.

Tools the AI Agent can leverage once activated

  • Dynamic SIEM queries
  • EDR/XDR telemetry lookups
  • Identity provider (IDP) investigation
  • Behavioral analysis of processes and command lines
  • User activity mapping
  • Process ancestry and parent-child correlation
  • Intezer’s historical alert database
  • Code DNA similarity and malware lineage tracking
  • Additional host, memory, or file-based forensics

The result is deeper investigation where it matters, without unnecessary cost.

Human-in-the-loop by design

Intezer keeps human analysts at the center so they can review and override conclusions, and trace every decision made by Intezer. Of course, all evidence and reasoning is grounded in forensic data and is fully transparent and explainable for beginners and advanced analysts alike.

This aligns with Anthropic’s principle that humans remain final decision-makers, especially in high-stakes domains like cybersecurity.

How this architecture improves SOC performance

Intezer’s adherence to Anthropic’s best practices produces measurable outcomes across the three most important SOC metrics: accuracy, coverage, and speed, while also reducing cost.

Accuracy

Intezer’s approach of combining deterministic forensics + adaptive AI = best-in-class verdict quality.

  • The structured workflow prevents hallucinations
  • The AI Agent only activates with strong guardrails
  • Context inheritance ensures consistent reasoning
  • Analysts always have visibility and control

This hybrid approach dramatically reduces false positives and prevents premature conclusions.

Triage of all alerts, including low-severity (where threats often hide)

Because AI Workflows handle the bulk of alerts inexpensively and AI Agents only run when needed, heavy and expensive reasoning calls are minimized

This frees SOCs from cherry-picking which alerts to ingest allowing them to triage and investigate them all.

This is crucial for:

  • High-volume enterprise environments
  • MSSPs with strict SLAs
  • Cloud-scale detection pipelines
  • 24/7 monitoring teams

You get broad alert coverage without inflating compute costs.

Speed: Structured steps + adaptive depth

  • Workflow mode resolves most alerts within seconds
  • Agents accelerate investigations that normally take analysts hours
  • No bottlenecks, no backlog, no manual evidence gathering

The result is a SOC where every alert is investigated quickly, consistently, and with forensic depth.

Table of how Intezer’s design reflects Anthropic’s guidance

Anthropic best practiceHow Intezer implements it
Start with deterministic workflowsAI Workflow handles structured triage with predefined expert steps
Activate agents only when neededAI Agent triggers only when confidence is insufficient
Give agents full contextAgent inherits the entire Workflow evidence set
Control tool usageAgent selects tools based on evidence, not speculation
Maintain human-in-the-loopAnalysts can verify, guide, and override conclusions
Prioritize safety and reproducibilityEvery action is logged, justified, and traceable

Conclusion: Anthropic’s Agent principles in a real SOC

Anthropic’s framework for building effective agents is now influencing industries far beyond general AI research. Intezer Forensic AI SOC might be one of the strongest real-world implementations of these practices in cybersecurity.

By combining:

  • Deterministic workflows for reliable baseline investigations
  • Adaptive agents for deeper reasoning when needed
  • Human oversight for trust and accountability
  • Cost efficiency enabling full-pipeline alert coverage

Intezer is able to deliver fast, accurate, and scalable triage that transforms SOC operations.

Learn more about how you can transform your SOC today.

The post Building effective AI for the SOC: How Intezer Forensic AI SOC follows Anthropic’s best practices appeared first on Intezer.

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So, You’ve Hit an Age Gate. What Now?

This blog also appears in our Age Verification Resource Hub: our one-stop shop for users seeking to understand what age-gating laws actually do, what’s at stake, how to protect yourself, and why EFF opposes all forms of age verification mandates. Head to EFF.org/Age to explore our resources and join us in the fight for a free, open, private, and yes—safe—internet.

EFF is against age gating and age verification mandates, and we hope we’ll win in getting existing ones overturned and new ones prevented. But mandates are already in effect, and every day many people are asked to verify their age across the web, despite prominent cases of sensitive data getting leaked in the process.

At some point, you may have been faced with the decision yourself: should I continue to use this service if I have to verify my age? And if so, how can I do that with the least risk to my personal information? This is our guide to navigating those decisions, with information on what questions to ask about the age verification options you’re presented with, and answers to those questions for some of the top most popular social media sites. Even though there’s no way to implement mandated age gates in a way that fully protects speech and privacy rights, our goal here is to help you minimize the infringement of your rights as you manage this awful situation.

Follow the Data

Since we know that leaks happen despite the best efforts of software engineers, we generally recommend submitting the absolute least amount of data possible. Unfortunately, that’s not going to be possible for everyone. Even facial age estimation solutions where pictures of your face never leave your device, offering some protection against data leakage, are not a good option for all users: facial age estimation works less well for people of color, trans and nonbinary people, and people with disabilities. There are some systems that use fancy cryptography so that a digital ID saved to your device won’t tell the website anything more than if you meet the age requirement, but access to that digital ID isn’t available to everyone or for all platforms. You may also not want to register for a digital ID and save it to your phone, if you don’t want to take the chance of all the information on it being exposed upon request of an over-zealous verifier, or you simply don’t want to be a part of a digital ID system

If you’re given the option of selecting a verification method and are deciding which to use, we recommend considering the following questions for each process allowed by each vendor:

    • Data: What info does each method require?
    • Access: Who can see the data during the course of the verification process?
    • Retention: Who will hold onto that data after the verification process, and for how long?
    • Audits: How sure are we that the stated claims will happen in practice? For example, are there external audits confirming that data is not accidentally leaked to another site along the way? Ideally these will be in-depth, security-focused audits by specialized auditors like NCC Group or Trail of Bits, instead of audits that merely certify adherence to standards. 
    • Visibility: Who will be aware that you’re attempting to verify your age, and will they know which platform you’re trying to verify for?

We attempt to provide answers to these questions below. To begin, there are two major factors to consider when answering these questions: the tools each platform uses, and the overall system those tools are part of.

In general, most platforms offer age estimation options like face scans as a first line of age assurance. These vary in intrusiveness, but their main problem is inaccuracy, particularly for marginalized users. Third-party age verification vendors Private ID and k-ID offer on-device facial age estimation, but another common vendor, Yoti, sends the image to their servers during age checks by some of the biggest platforms. This risks leaking the images themselves, and also the fact that you’re using that particular website, to the third party. 

Then, there’s the document-based verification services, which require you to submit a hard identifier like a government-issued ID. This method thus requires you to prove both your age and your identity. A platform can do this in-house through a designated dataflow, or by sending that data to a third party. We’ve already seen examples of how this can fail. For example, Discord routed users' ID data through its general customer service workflow so that a third-party vendor could perform manual review of verification appeals. No one involved ever deleted users' data, so when the system was breached, Discord had to apologize for the catastrophic disclosure of nearly 70,000 photos of users' ID documents. Overly long retention periods expose documents to risk of breaches and historical data requests. Some document verifiers have retention periods that are needlessly long. This is the case with Incode, which provides ID verification for Tiktok. Incode holds onto images forever by default, though TikTok should automatically start the deletion process on your behalf.

Some platforms offer alternatives, like proving that you own a credit card, or asking for your email to check if it appears in databases associated with adulthood (like home mortgage databases). These tend to involve less risk when it comes to the sensitivity of the data itself, especially since credit cards can be replaced, but in general still undermine anonymity and pseudonymity and pose a risk of tracking your online activity. We’d prefer to see more assurances across the board about how information is handled.

Each site offers users a menu of age assurance options to choose from. We’ve chosen to present these options in the rough order that we expect most people to prefer. Jump directly to a platform to learn more about its age checks:

Meta – Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger, Threads

Inferred Age

If Meta can guess your age, you may never even see an age verification screen. Meta, which runs Facebook, Threads, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp, first tries to use information you’ve posted to guess your age, like looking at “Happy birthday!” messages. It’s a creepy reminder that they already have quite a lot of information about you.

If Meta cannot guess your age, or if Meta infers you're too young, it will next ask you to verify your age using either facial age estimation, or by uploading your photo ID. 

Face Scan

If you choose to use facial age estimation, you’ll be sent to Yoti, a third-party verification service. Your photo will be uploaded to their servers during this process. Yoti claims that “as soon as an age has been estimated, the facial image is immediately and permanently deleted.” Though it’s not as good as not having that data in the first place, Yoti’s security measures include a bug bounty program and annual penetration testing. Researchers from Mint Secure found that Yoti’s app and website are filled with trackers, so the fact that you’re verifying your age could be not only shared to Yoti, but leaked to third-party data brokers as well. 

You may not want to use this option if you’re worried about third parties potentially being able to know you’re trying to verify your age with Meta. You also might not want to use this if you’re worried about a current picture of your face accidentally leaking—for example, if elements in the background of your selfie might reveal your current location. On the other hand, if you consider a selfie to be less sensitive than a photograph of your ID, this option might be better. If you do choose (or are forced to) use the face check system, be sure to snap your selfie without anything you'd be concerned with identifying your location or embarrassing you in the background in case the image leaks.

Upload ID

If Yoti’s age estimation decides your face looks too young, or if you opt out of facial age estimation, your next recourse is to send Meta a photo of your ID. Meta sends that photo to Yoti to verify the ID. Meta says it will hold onto that ID image for 30 days, then delete it. Meanwhile, Yoti claims it will delete the image immediately after verification. Of course, bugs and process oversights exist, such as accidentally replicating information in logs or support queues, but at least they have stated processes. Your ID contains sensitive information such as your full legal name and home address. Using this option not only runs the (hopefully small, but never nonexistent) risk of that data getting leaked through errors or hacking, but it also lets Meta see the information needed to tie your profile to your identity—which you may not want. If you don’t want Meta to know your name and where you live, or rely on both Meta and Yoti to keep to their deletion promises, this option may not be right for you.

Google – Gmail, YouTube 

Inferred Age

If Google can guess your age, you may never even see an age verification screen. Your Google account is typically connected to your YouTube account, so if (like mine) your YouTube account is old enough to vote, you may not need to verify your Google account at all. Google first uses information it already knows to try to guess your age, like how long you’ve had the account and your YouTube viewing habits. It’s yet another creepy reminder of how much information these corporations have on you, but at least in this case they aren’t likely to ask for even more identifying data.

If Google cannot guess your age, or decides you're too young, Google will next ask you to verify your age. You’ll be given a variety of options for how to do so, with availability that will depend on your location and your age.

Google’s methods to assure your age include ID verification, facial age estimation, verification by proxy, and digital ID. To prove you’re over 18, you may be able to use facial age estimation, give Google your credit card information, or tell a third-party provider your email address.

Face Scan

If you choose to use facial age estimation, you’ll be sent to a website run by Private ID, a third-party verification service. The website will load Private ID’s verifier within the page—this means that your selfie will be checked without any images leaving your device. If the system decides you’re over 18, it will let Google know that, and only that. Of course, no technology is perfect—should Private ID be mandated to target you specifically, there’s nothing to stop it from sending down code that does in fact upload your image, and you probably won’t notice. But unless your threat model includes being specifically targeted by a state actor or Private ID, that’s unlikely to be something you need to worry about. For most people, no one else will see your image during this process. Private ID will, however, be told that your device is trying to verify your age with Google and Google will still find out if Private ID thinks that you’re under 18.

If Private ID’s age estimation decides your face looks too young, you may next be able to decide if you’d rather let Google verify your age by giving it your credit card information, photo ID, or digital ID, or by letting Google send your email address to a third-party verifier.

Email Usage

If you choose to provide your email address, Google sends it on to a company called VerifyMy. VerifyMy will use your email address to see if you’ve done things like get a mortgage or paid for utilities using that email address. If you use Gmail as your email provider, this may be a privacy-protective option with respect to Google, as Google will then already know the email address associated with the account. But it does tell VerifyMy and its third-party partners that the person behind this email address is looking to verify their age, which you may not want them to know. VerifyMy uses “proprietary algorithms and external data sources” that involve sending your email address to “trusted third parties, such as data aggregators.” It claims to “ensure that such third parties are contractually bound to meet these requirements,” but you’ll have to trust it on that one—we haven’t seen any mention of who those parties are, so you’ll have no way to check up on their practices and security. On the bright side, VerifyMy and its partners do claim to delete your information as soon as the check is completed.

Credit Card Verification

If you choose to let Google use your credit card information, you’ll be asked to set up a Google Payments account. Note that debit cards won’t be accepted, since it’s much easier for many debit cards to be issued to people under 18. Google will then charge a small amount to the card, and refund it once it goes through. If you choose this method, you’ll have to tell Google your credit card info, but the fact that it’s done through Google Payments (their regular card-processing system) means that at least your credit card information won’t be sitting around in some unsecured system. Even if your credit card information happens to accidentally be leaked, this is a relatively low-risk option, since credit cards come with solid fraud protection. If your credit card info gets leaked, you should easily be able to dispute fraudulent charges and replace the card.

Digital ID

If the option is available to you, you may be able to use your digital ID to verify your age with Google. In some regions, you’ll be given the option to use your digital ID. In some cases, it’s possible to only reveal your age information when you use a digital ID. If you’re given that choice, it can be a good privacy-preserving option. Depending on the implementation, there’s a chance that the verification step will “phone home” to the ID provider (usually a government) to let them know the service asked for your age. It’s a complicated and varied topic that you can learn more about by visiting EFF’s page on digital identity.

Upload ID

Should none of these options work for you, your final recourse is to send Google a photo of your ID. Here, you’ll be asked to take a photo of an acceptable ID and send it to Google. Though the help page only states that your ID “will be stored securely,” the verification process page says ID “will be deleted after your date of birth is successfully verified.” Acceptable IDs vary by country, but are generally government-issued photo IDs. We like that it’s deleted immediately, though we have questions about what Google means when it says your ID will be used to “improve [its] verification services for Google products and protect against fraud and abuse.” No system is perfect, and we can only hope that Google schedules outside audits regularly.

TikTok

Inferred Age

If TikTok can guess your age, you may never even see an age verification notification. TikTok first tries to use information you’ve posted to estimate your age, looking through your videos and photos to analyze your face and listen to your voice. By uploading any videos, TikTok believes you’ve given it consent to try to guess how old you look and sound.

If TikTok decides you’re too young, appeal to revoke their age decision before the deadline passes. If TikTok cannot guess your age, or decides you're too young, it will automatically revoke your access based on age—including either restricting features or deleting your account. To get your access and account back, you’ll have a limited amount of time to verify your age. As soon as you see the notification that your account is restricted, you’ll want to act fast because in some places you’ll have as little as 23 days before the deadline passes.

When you get that notification, you’re given various options to verify your age based on your location.

Face Scan

If you’re given the option to use facial age estimation, you’ll be sent to Yoti, a third-party verification service. Your photo will be uploaded to their servers during this process. Yoti claims that “as soon as an age has been estimated, the facial image is immediately and permanently deleted.” Though it’s not as good as not having that data in the first place, Yoti’s security measures include a bug bounty program and annual penetration testing. However, researchers from Mint Secure found that Yoti’s app and website are filled with trackers, so the fact that you’re verifying your age could be leaked not only to Yoti, but to third-party data brokers as well.

You may not want to use this option if you’re worried about third parties potentially being able to know you’re trying to verify your age with TikTok. You also might not want to use this if you’re worried about a current picture of your face accidentally leaking—for example, if elements in the background of your selfie might reveal your current location. On the other hand, if you consider a selfie to be less sensitive than a photograph of your ID or your credit card information, this option might be better. If you do choose (or are forced to) use the face check system, be sure to snap your selfie without anything you'd be concerned with identifying your location or embarrassing you in the background in case the image leaks.

Credit Card Verification

If you have a credit card in your name, TikTok will accept that as proof that you’re over 18. Note that debit cards won’t be accepted, since it’s much easier for many debit cards to be issued to people under 18. TikTok will charge a small amount to the credit card, and refund it once it goes through. It’s unclear if this goes through their regular payment process, or if your credit card information will be sent through and stored in a separate, less secure system. Luckily, these days credit cards come with solid fraud protection, so if your credit card gets leaked, you should easily be able to dispute fraudulent charges and replace the card. That said, we’d rather TikTok provide assurances that the information will be processed securely.

Credit Card Verification of a Parent or Guardian

Sometimes, if you’re between 13 and 17, you’ll be given the option to let your parent or guardian confirm your age. You’ll tell TikTok their email address, and TikTok will send your parent or guardian an email asking them (a) to confirm your date of birth, and (b) to verify their own age by proving that they own a valid credit card. This option doesn’t always seem to be offered, and in the one case we could find, it’s possible that TikTok never followed up with the parent. So it’s unclear how or if TikTok verifies that the adult whose email you provide is your parent or guardian. If you want to use credit card verification but you’re not old enough to have a credit card, and you’re ok with letting an adult know you use TikTok, this option may be reasonable to try.

Photo with a Random Adult?

Bizarrely, if you’re between 13 and 17, TikTok claims to offer the option to take a photo with literally any random adult to confirm your age. Its help page says that any trusted adult over 25 can be chosen, as long as they’re holding a piece of paper with the code on it that TikTok provides. It also mentions that a third-party provider is used here, but doesn’t say which one. We haven’t found any evidence of this verification method being offered. Please do let us know if you’ve used this method to verify your age on TikTok!

Photo ID and Face Comparison

If you aren’t offered or have failed the other options, you’ll have to verify your age by submitting a copy of your ID and matching photo of your face. You’ll be sent to Incode, a third-party verification service. In a disappointing failure to meet the industry standard, Incode itself doesn’t automatically delete the data you give it once the process is complete, but TikTok does claim to “start the process to delete the information you submitted,” which should include telling Incode to delete your data once the process is done. If you want to be sure, you can ask Incode to delete that data yourself. Incode tells TikTok that you met the age threshold without providing your exact date of birth, but then TikTok wants to know the exact date anyway, so it’ll ask for your date of birth even after your age has been verified.

TikTok itself might not see your actual ID depending on its implementation choices, but Incode will. Your ID contains sensitive information such as your full legal name and home address. Using this option not only runs the (hopefully small, but never nonexistent) risk of that data getting accidentally leaked through errors or hacking. If you don’t want TikTok or Incode to know your name, what you look like, and where you live—or if you don't want to rely on both TikTok and Incode to keep to their deletion promises—then this option may not be right for you.

Everywhere Else

We’ve covered the major providers here, but age verification is unfortunately being required of many other services that you might use as well. While the providers and processes may vary, the same general principles will apply. If you’re trying to choose what information to provide to continue to use a service, consider the “follow the data” questions mentioned above, and try to find out how the company will store and process the data you give it. The less sensitive information, the fewer people have access to it, and the more quickly it will be deleted, the better. You may even come to recognize popular names in the age verification industry: Spotify and OnlyFans use Yoti (just like Meta and Tiktok), Quora and Discord use k-ID, and so on. 

Unfortunately, it should be clear by now that none of the age verification options are perfect in terms of protecting information, providing access to everyone, and safely handling sensitive data. That’s just one of the reasons that EFF is against age-gating mandates, and is working to stop and overturn them across the United States and around the world.


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Help protect digital privacy & free speech for everyone

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Microsoft named a Leader in IDC MarketScape for Unified AI Governance Platforms

As organizations rapidly embrace generative and agentic AI, ensuring robust, unified governance has never been more critical. That’s why Microsoft is honored to be named a Leader in the 2025-2026 IDC MarketScape for Worldwide Unified AI Governance Platforms (Vendor Assessment (#US53514825, December 2025). We believe this recognition highlights our commitment to making AI innovation safe, responsible, and enterprise-ready—so you can move fast without compromising trust or compliance.

A graphic showing Microsoft's position in the Leaders section of the IDC report.
Figure 1. IDC MarketScape vendor analysis model is designed to provide an overview of the competitive fitness of technology and suppliers in a given market. The research methodology utilizes a rigorous scoring methodology based on both qualitative and quantitative criteria that results in a single graphical illustration of each supplier’s position within a given market. The Capabilities score measures supplier product, go-to-market and business execution in the short term. The Strategy score measures alignment of supplier strategies with customer requirements in a three- to five-year timeframe. Supplier market share is represented by the size of the icons.

The urgency for a unified AI governance strategy is being driven by stricter regulatory demands, the sheer complexity of managing AI systems across multiple AI platforms and multicloud and hybrid environments, and leadership concerns for risk related to negative brand impact. Centralized, end-to-end governance platforms help organizations reduce compliance bottlenecks, lower operational risks, and turn governance into a strategic driver for responsible AI innovation. In today’s landscape, unified AI governance is not just a compliance obligation—it is critical infrastructure for trust, transparency, and sustainable business transformation.

Our own approach to AI is anchored to Microsoft’s Responsible AI standard, backed by a dedicated Office of Responsible AI. Drawing from our internal experience in building, securing, and governing AI systems, we translate these learnings directly into our AI management tools and security platform. As a result, customers benefit from features such as transparency notes, fairness analysis, explainability tools, safety guardrails, regulatory compliance assessments, agent identity, data security, vulnerability identification, and protection against cyberthreats like prompt-injection attacks. These tools enable them to develop, secure, and govern AI that aligns with ethical principles and is built to help support compliance with regulatory requirements. By integrating these capabilities, we empower organizations to make ethical decisions and safeguard their business processes throughout the entire AI lifecycle.

Microsoft’s AI Governance capabilities aim to provide integrated and centralized control for observability, management, and security across IT, developer, and security teams, ensuring integrated governance within their existing tools. Microsoft Foundry acts as our main control point for model development, evaluation, deployment, and monitoring, featuring a curated model catalog, machine learning oeprations, robust evaluation, and embedded content safety guardrails. Microsoft Agent 365, which was not yet available at the time of the IDC publication, provides a centralized control plane for IT, helping teams confidently deploy, manage, and secure their agentic AI published through Microsoft 365 Copilot, Microsoft Copilot Studio, and Microsoft Foundry.

Deeply embedded security systems are integral to Microsoft’s AI governance solution. Integrations with Microsoft Purview provide real-time data security, compliance, and governance tools, while Microsoft Entra provides agent identity and controls to manage agent sprawl and prevent unauthorized access to confidential resources. Microsoft Defender offers AI-specific posture management, threat detection, and runtime protection. Microsoft Purview Compliance Manager automates adherence to more than 100 regulatory frameworks. Granular audit logging and automated documentation bolster regulatory and forensic capabilities, enabling organizations in regulated industries to innovate with AI while maintaining oversight, secure collaboration, and consistent policy enforcement.

Guidance for security and governance leaders and CISOs

To empower organizations in advancing their AI transformation initiatives, it is crucial to focus on the following priorities for establishing a secure, well-governed, and scalable AI framework. The guidance below provides Microsoft’s recommendations for fulfilling these best practices:

CISO guidanceWhat it meansHow Microsoft delivers
Adopt a unified, end‑to‑end governance platformEstablish a comprehensive, integrated governance system covering traditional machine learning, generative AI, and agentic AI. Ensure unified oversight from development through deployment and monitoring.Microsoft enables observability and governance at every layer across IT, developer, and security teams to provide an integrated and cohesive governance platform that enables teams to play their part from within the tools they use. Microsoft Foundry acts as the developer control plane, connecting model development, evaluation, security controls, and continuous monitoring. Microsoft Agent 365 is the control plane for IT, enabling discovery, security, deployment, and observability for agentic AI in the enterprise. Microsoft Purview, Entra, and Defender integrate to deliver consistent full-stack governance across data, identity, threat protection, and compliance.
Industry‑leading responsible AI infrastructureImplement responsible AI practices as a foundational part of engineering and operations, with transparency and fairness built in.Microsoft embeds its Responsible AI Standards into our engineering processes, supported by the Office of Responsible AI. Automatic generation of model cards and built-in fairness mechanisms set Microsoft apart as a strategic differentiator, pairing technical controls with mature governance processes. Microsoft’s Responsible AI Transparency Report provides visibility to how we develop and deploy AI models and systems responsibility and provides a model for customers to emulate our best practices.
Advanced security and real‑time protectionProvide robust, real-time defense against emerging AI security threats, especially for regulated industries.Microsoft’s platform features real-time jailbreak detection, encrypted agent-to-agent communication, tamper-evident audit logs for model and agent actions, and deep integration with Defender to provide AI-specific threat detection, security posture management, and automated incident response capabilities. These capabilities are especially critical for regulated sectors.
Automated compliance at scaleAutomate compliance processes, enable policy enforcement throughout the AI lifecycle, and support audit readiness across hybrid and multicloud environments.Microsoft Purview streamlines compliance adherence for regulatory requirements and provides comprehensive support for hybrid and multicloud deployments—giving customers repeatable and auditable governance processes.

We believe we are differentiated in the AI governance space by delivering a unified, end-to-end platform that embeds responsible AI principles and robust security at every layer—from agents and applications to underlying infrastructure. Through native integration of Microsoft Foundry, Microsoft Agent 365, Purview, Entra, and Defender, organizations benefit from centralized oversight and observability across the layers of the organization with consistent protection and operationalized compliance across the AI lifecycle. Our comprehensive approach removes disparate and disconnected tooling, enabling organizations to build trustworthy, transparent, and secure AI solutions that can start secure and stay secure. We believe this approach uniquely differentiates Microsoft as a leader in operationalizing responsible, secure, and auditable AI at scale.

Strengthen your security strategy with Microsoft AI governance solutions

Agentic and generative AI are reshaping business processes, creating a new frontier for security and governance. Organizations that act early and prioritize governance best practices—unified governance platforms, build-in responsible AI tooling, and integrated security—will be best positioned to innovate confidently and maintain trust.

Microsoft approaches AI governance with a commitment to embedding responsible practices and robust security at every layer of the AI ecosystem. Our AI governance and security solutions empower customers with built-in transparency, fairness, and compliance tools throughout engineering and operations. We believe this approach allows organizations to benefit from centralized oversight, enforce policies consistently across the entire AI lifecycle, and achieve audit readiness—even in the rapidly changing landscape of generative and agentic AI.

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The post Microsoft named a Leader in IDC MarketScape for Unified AI Governance Platforms appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog.

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Phishing scammers are posting fake “account restricted” comments on LinkedIn

Recently, fake LinkedIn profiles have started posting comment replies claiming that a user has “engaged in activities that are not in compliance” with LinkedIn’s policies and that their account has been “temporarily restricted” until they submit an appeal through a specified link in the comment.

The comments come in different shapes and sizes, but here’s one example we found.

Your account is at risk of suspension

The accounts posting the comments all try to look like official LinkedIn bots and use various names. It’s likely they create new accounts when LinkedIn removes them. Either way, multiple accounts similar to the “Linked Very” one above were reported in a short period, suggesting automated creation and posting at scale.

The same pattern is true for the links. The shortened link used in the example above has already been disabled, while others point directly to phishing sites. Scammers often use shortened LinkedIn links to build trust, making targets believe the messages are legitimate. Because LinkedIn can quickly disable these links, attackers likely test different approaches to see which last the longest.

Here’s another example:

As a preventive measure, access to your account is temporarily restricted

Malwarebytes blocks this last link based on the IP address:

Malwarebytes blocks 103.224.182.251

If users follow these links, they are taken to a phishing page designed to steal their LinkedIn login details:

fake LinkedIn log in site
Image courtesy of BleepingComputer

A LinkedIn spokesperson confirmed to BleepingComputer they are aware of the situation:

“I can confirm that we are aware of this activity and our teams are working to take action.”

Stay safe

In situations like this awareness is key—and now you know what to watch for. Some additional tips:

  • Don’t click on unsolicited links in private messages and comments without verifying with the trusted sender that they’re legitimate.
  • Always log in directly on the platform that you are trying to access, rather than through a link.
  • Use a password manager, which won’t auto-fill in credentials on fake websites.
  • Use a real-time, up-to-date anti-malware solution with a web protection module to block malicious sites.

Pro tip: The free Malwarebytes Browser Guard extension blocks known malicious websites and scripts.


We don’t just report on scams—we help detect them

Cybersecurity risks should never spread beyond a headline. If something looks dodgy to you, check if it’s a scam using Malwarebytes Scam Guard, a feature of our mobile protection products. Submit a screenshot, paste suspicious content, or share a text or phone number, and we’ll tell you if it’s a scam or legit. Download Malwarebytes Mobile Security for iOS or Android and try it today!

  •  

Phishing scammers are posting fake “account restricted” comments on LinkedIn

Recently, fake LinkedIn profiles have started posting comment replies claiming that a user has “engaged in activities that are not in compliance” with LinkedIn’s policies and that their account has been “temporarily restricted” until they submit an appeal through a specified link in the comment.

The comments come in different shapes and sizes, but here’s one example we found.

Your account is at risk of suspension

The accounts posting the comments all try to look like official LinkedIn bots and use various names. It’s likely they create new accounts when LinkedIn removes them. Either way, multiple accounts similar to the “Linked Very” one above were reported in a short period, suggesting automated creation and posting at scale.

The same pattern is true for the links. The shortened link used in the example above has already been disabled, while others point directly to phishing sites. Scammers often use shortened LinkedIn links to build trust, making targets believe the messages are legitimate. Because LinkedIn can quickly disable these links, attackers likely test different approaches to see which last the longest.

Here’s another example:

As a preventive measure, access to your account is temporarily restricted

Malwarebytes blocks this last link based on the IP address:

Malwarebytes blocks 103.224.182.251

If users follow these links, they are taken to a phishing page designed to steal their LinkedIn login details:

fake LinkedIn log in site
Image courtesy of BleepingComputer

A LinkedIn spokesperson confirmed to BleepingComputer they are aware of the situation:

“I can confirm that we are aware of this activity and our teams are working to take action.”

Stay safe

In situations like this awareness is key—and now you know what to watch for. Some additional tips:

  • Don’t click on unsolicited links in private messages and comments without verifying with the trusted sender that they’re legitimate.
  • Always log in directly on the platform that you are trying to access, rather than through a link.
  • Use a password manager, which won’t auto-fill in credentials on fake websites.
  • Use a real-time, up-to-date anti-malware solution with a web protection module to block malicious sites.

Pro tip: The free Malwarebytes Browser Guard extension blocks known malicious websites and scripts.


We don’t just report on scams—we help detect them

Cybersecurity risks should never spread beyond a headline. If something looks dodgy to you, check if it’s a scam using Malwarebytes Scam Guard, a feature of our mobile protection products. Submit a screenshot, paste suspicious content, or share a text or phone number, and we’ll tell you if it’s a scam or legit. Download Malwarebytes Mobile Security for iOS or Android and try it today!

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