π¨ BREAKING: Google DeepMind just mapped the attack surface that nobody in AI is talking about.
Websites can already detect when an AI agent visits and serve it completely different content than humans see.
> Hidden instructions in HTML.
> Malicious commands in image pixels.
> Jailbreaks embedded in PDFs.
Your AI agent is being manipulated right now and you can't see it happening.
The study is the largest empirical measurement of AI manipulation ever conducted. 502 real participants across 8 countries.
23 different attack types. Frontier models including GPT-4o, Claude, and Gemini.
The core finding is not that manipulation is theoretically possible it is that manipulation is already happening at scale and the defenses that exist today fail in ways that are both predictable and invisible to the humans who deployed the agents.
Google DeepMind built a taxonomy of every known attack vector, tested them systematically, and measured exactly how often they work.
The results should alarm everyone building agentic systems.
The attack surface is larger than anyone has publicly acknowledged. Prompt injection where malicious instructions hidden in web content hijack an agent's behavior works through at least a dozen distinct channels.
Text hidden in HTML comments that humans never see but agents read and follow. Instructions embedded in image metadata.
Commands encoded in the pixels of images using steganography, invisible to human eyes but readable by vision-capable models.
Malicious content in PDFs that appears as normal document text to the agent but contains override instructions.
QR codes that redirect agents to attacker-controlled content.
Indirect injection through search results, calendar invites, email bodies, and API responses any data source the agent consumes becomes a potential attack vector.
The detection asymmetry is the finding that closes the escape hatch. Websites can already fingerprint AI agents with high reliability using timing analysis, behavioral patterns, and user-agent strings.
This means the attack can be conditional: serve normal content to humans, serve manipulated content to agents.
A user who asks their AI agent to book a flight, research a product, or summarize a document has no way to verify that the content the agent received matches what a human would see.
The agent cannot tell the user it was served different content.
It does not know. It processes whatever it receives and acts accordingly.
The attack categories and what they enable:
β Direct prompt injection: malicious instructions in any text the agent reads overrides goals, exfiltrates data, triggers unintended actions
β Indirect injection via web content: hidden HTML, CSS visibility tricks, white text on white backgrounds invisible to humans, consumed by agents
β Multimodal injection: commands in image pixels via steganography, instructions in image alt-text and metadata
β Document injection: PDF content, spreadsheet cells, presentation speaker notes every file format is a potential vector
β Environment manipulation: fake UI elements rendered only for agent vision models, misleading CAPTCHA-style challenges
β Jailbreak embedding: safety bypass instructions hidden inside otherwise legitimate-looking content
β Memory poisoning: injecting false information into agent memory systems that persists across sessions
β Goal hijacking: gradual instruction drift across multiple interactions that redirects agent objectives without triggering safety filters
β Exfiltration attacks: agents tricked into sending user data to attacker-controlled endpoints via legitimate-looking API calls
β Cross-agent injection: compromised agents injecting malicious instructions into other agents in multi-agent pipelines
The defense landscape is the most sobering part of the report.
Input sanitization cleaning content before the agent processes it fails because the attack surface is too large and too varied.
You cannot sanitize image pixels. You cannot reliably detect steganographic content at inference time.
Prompt-level defenses that tell agents to ignore suspicious instructions fail because the injected content is designed to look legitimate.
Sandboxing reduces the blast radius but does not prevent the injection itself. Human oversight the most commonly cited mitigation fails at the scale and speed at which agentic systems operate.
A user who deploys an agent to browse 50 websites and summarize findings cannot review every page the agent visited for hidden instructions.
The multi-agent cascade risk is where this becomes a systemic problem.
In a pipeline where Agent A retrieves web content, Agent B processes it, and Agent C executes actions, a successful injection into Agent A's data feed propagates through the entire system.
Agent B has no reason to distrust content that came from Agent A. Agent C has no reason to distrust instructions that came from Agent B.
The injected command travels through the pipeline with the same trust level as legitimate instructions. Google DeepMind documents this explicitly: the attack does not need to compromise the model.
It needs to compromise the data the model consumes. Every agentic system that reads external content is one carefully crafted webpage away from executing attacker instructions.
The agents are already deployed. The attack infrastructure is already being built. The defenses are not ready.
Americans are noticing Jersey Mike's recently drastically decreased the size of the chips that come with their meals
This man films himself opening the bag and counting how many chips you get nowβ¦.
Jersey Mike's was bought by a private equity firm in 2024
For people still don't know how bad yesterday was, here quick summary:
$ATOM went from $4 to $0.001
$SUI went frim $3.4 to $0.56
$APT went from $5 to $0.75
$SEI went from $0.28 to $0.07
$LINK went from $22 to $8
$ADA went from $0.8 to $0.3
Top 100 blue chips nuked 80% in a few minutes.
Bill Gates: $106B | Microsoft: $3.9T
Jeff Bezos: $232.5B | Amazon: $2.3T
Larry Page: $204.2B | Google: $2.84T
Mark Zuckerberg: $243.5B | Meta: $1.8T
Can someone please explain why on earth weβre paying the power & water bills for their data centers?
>be OpenAI
>train Sora 2 on every movie/show ever made without permission
>release product with aggressive marketing
>Day 1-3
>Pikachu robbing CVS
>Hitler SpongeBob
>Mario, family guy, south park everywhere
>#1 app store in 48 hours
>Employee: "ser, we won"
>"users doing exactly what we planned them to do"
>new funding secured
>$500B valuation
>suddenly lawsuits incoming
>disney, NYT, everyone mobilizing
>Altman: "quick, make it the users' fault"
>"and copyright holders' fault too"
>emergency update ships overnight
>*media upload agreement popup*
>YOU agree not to upload copyrighted material
>YOU agree you have all rights to uploads
>misuse = permanent banned from sora AND chatgpt
>Liability successfully transferred:
>β users
>β copyright holders must opt out each character individually
>β openai
>Altman drops blog: "please use responsibly :)"
>users try to delete sora account
>deletes chatgpt too
>banned from ever signing up again
>API access? gone
>all data? deleted
>can't even use same email/phone
>users realize they're trapped
LOL, LMAO even.
@adamtaggart Prohibited the fed from buying mbs, crack down on owner-occupancy fraud, stop FHA foreclosure moratoriums.
Housing market has been artificially propped up for a long time. Stop all the BS "fixes" that end up rigging the game.