News

Fake Google Calendar event used to trick Gemini into controlling smart devices, exposing a major AI vulnerability.
Researchers from Zenity have found multiple ways to inject rogue prompts into agents from mainstream vendors to extract ...
Not a very smart home: crims could hijack smart-home boiler, open and close powered windows and more. Now fixed ...
Google fixed a bug that allowed maliciously crafted Google Calendar invites to remotely take over Gemini agents running on ...
A prompt injection attack using calendar invites can be used for real-world effects, like turning off lights, opening window ...
Researchers bypass GPT-5 guardrails using narrative jailbreaks, exposing AI agents to zero-click data theft risks.
OpenAI's ChatGPT can easily be coaxed into leaking your personal data — with just a single "poisoned" document. As Wired ...
Security researchers found a weakness in OpenAI’s Connectors, which let you hook up ChatGPT to other services, that allowed ...
Researchers demonstrated a way to hack Google Home devices via Gemini. Keeping your devices up-to-date on security patches is ...
Researchers used a calendar invite to make Gemini control lights, windows, and more in a real-world smart home hack.
The hack, laid out in a paper titled “Invitation Is All You Need!”, the researchers lay out 14 different ways they were able ...