惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
S
Secure Thoughts
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
AI
AI
B
Blog RSS Feed
S
Schneier on Security
雷峰网
雷峰网
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
罗磊的独立博客
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
P
Proofpoint News Feed
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
博客园 - Franky
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
The Cloudflare Blog
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
博客园 - 叶小钗
美团技术团队
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Vercel News
Vercel News
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
O
OpenAI News
博客园 - 【当耐特】
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
H
Heimdal Security Blog
I
InfoQ
GbyAI
GbyAI
T
Threatpost
C
Cisco Blogs

Latest from TechRadar

Quordle hints and answers for Monday, April 13 (game #1540) NYT Strands hints and answers for Monday, April 13 (game #771) NYT Connections hints and answers for Monday, April 13 (game #1037) Morbid Metal developer explains why he ditched an origami art direction in favor of gritty sci-fi — 'It worked, but it didn't really feel like me' '71% of US households get routers from ISPs': Why new FCC rules could leave millions stuck with outdated,… 'The CPU is the system’s executive layer': Intel joins SambaNova as both face existential threat from… ‘More bang for your buck’: 7 easy ways to boost your MacBook Neo’s performance for free DJI Romo P vs Roborock Saros 10R — which robot vacuum comes out on top when it comes to dodging obstacles? I put… I spent 6 hours with Genshin Impact on the Galaxy S26 Ultra, and I can't believe how far mobile gaming has come What is the release date for The Testaments episode 4 on Hulu and Disney+? I reviewed the LG G6 for 3 weeks, and it's a fantastic OLED TV that's the new best option for brighter rooms Is your bird feeder camera doing more harm than good? 3 tips for using it safely as RSPB issues urgent disease warning Chelsea vs Man City Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025/26 from anywhere in the world, team news How to watch Alcaraz vs Sinner for FREE: TV Channels for Monte-Carlo Masters Final Sunderland vs Tottenham Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025/26 from anywhere in the world, team news Are these the best-designed workout headphones ever? I used them for a month to find out How to watch Snooker 900 John Virgo online (it's free) – stream O'Sullivan vs Higgins anywhere I've only just discovered the Walk With Frodo app on Garmin's Connect IQ store — and as as a huge LOTR nerd, it's going to make the next 1,800 miles fly by 'Just not sustainable': Why your monthly £25 broadband internet bill could soon hit £45 How to watch Paris-Roubaix 2026: Free Streams & TV Info as Tadej Pogacar chases third Monument How to watch Euphoria season 3 online – stream Zendaya & Sydney Sweeney drama from anywhere today '$15K bill destroyed a solo developer’s startup': How hackers are using leaked Google API keys to… There's a sneaky way to watch UFC 327 really cheap... NYT Connections hints and answers for Sunday, April 12 (game #1036) NYT Strands hints and answers for Sunday, April 12 (game #770) Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, April 12 (game #1539) Amazon's Ring cameras are the perfect solution to secure your home on a budget — shop today's best deals… I've tested every iPhone since the iPhone 12, and Ceramic Shield 2 is the first iPhone glass I fully trust UFC 327 live stream: how to watch Procházka vs Ulberg, start time, preview, full card We're officially getting the DJI Pocket 4 on April 16, but here's how Insta360 could beat it 'Today is the day you've been waiting for': eGPUs can now officially turn a humble Mac Mini into an AI… Linux pulls support for ancient CPU — unsurprisingly, Linus Torvald says there is 'zero real reason' to… Keanu Reeves' new Apple TV movie Outcome has been slammed by critics — watch these 4 highly-rated films with the beloved actor instead 'AI is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity': Amazon CEO Andy Jassy lays out his '6 truths' for the… How to watch Grand National 2026: Free Streams & TV Channels for Aintree National Hunt Race ‘I hadn’t verified a single thing’: Using ChatGPT for Iran war news changed how I trust information Want cafe-quality lattes at home without buying an expensive new coffee machine? Jura's new gadget upgrades your drinks with perfectly foamed milk every time 'A self-inflicted hit': Washington state just rolled back sales tax exemptions for AI data centers worth… Playing The Last of Us with friends made my favorite PlayStation game feel brand new again Mint Mobile's new Samsung Galaxy S26 series deal can save you up to $900 — enough to cover an entire device Not a squat, not a deadlift — the trap bar deadlift 'sits between' the two, builds muscle fast and is… Record Store Day 2026 starts soon! The date, the top vinyl drops, and everything else you need to know Women's Six Nations 2026 Free Streams: TV Channels, Preview, Table, Round 5 Fixtures, France vs England Time Beyond Paradise season 4 star would 'love' to do The Celebrity Traitors season 2 — and would be 'terrified' if one contestant came to Shipton Abbott 'There’s no one-size-fits-all office chair': Vari explains the design decisions behind its award-winning… I was a vacuum reviewer for two years — these are the 6 sub-£250 models I'd recommend in a heartbeat Save $200 and get the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra at its preorder price for a limited time at Amazon 'Small business owners have significant creative control from start to finish' — VistaPrint reveals the… TurboQuant isn't the RAM crisis savior you're hoping for, analysts say — as memory prices continue to… ICYMI: the 7 biggest tech stories of the week, from DJI's new robovac to Artemis II iPhone photos I matched the upgraded Meta AI against ChatGPT, and you can really tell which AI has social media roots Quordle hints and answers for Saturday, April 11 (game #1538) I created my dream coffee corner at IKEA for under $100 — and my mornings are about to get a lot cozier 'Experts' to rent for $1 per month: Hostinger debuts 7-person AI team to help SMBs save thousands on… The new MacBook Air has already dropped to a record-low price on Amazon I tested Turtle Beach's Mario-themed controller and headset for Nintendo Switch 2 — and they surprised me for… NYT Strands hints and answers for Saturday, April 11 (game #769) NYT Connections hints and answers for Saturday, April 11 (game #1035) After soaring 2,200%, DDR4 RAM prices finally fall — but don't get too excited It's "completely changed my home cleaning habits": The Dreame Z20 is a highly effective vacuum cleaner for even lsrger homes. Beyond no-log: Tor looks into seizure-proof servers that forget your data There's a sneaky way to watch IPL 2026 for FREE Microsoft hands Linux Foundation key Surface data to help fix laptop battery life Adobe Reader users beware — experts flag months-old security flaw using booby-trapped PDFs to scope out victims 'Shockingly good value': New rugged Android tablet has a built-in 1080p projector, night-vision camera, and… Stop the presses — Microsoft is actually cutting cloud PC prices for SMBs, promises to make it 'more cost-effective for small and medium businesses' Microsoft has begun stripping out AI from Windows 11 — but it's already being criticized for not going far… Euphoria season 3 episode 3 release date: when will it come out on HBO Max? 'If one piece of your supply chain is delayed, then your whole project can't deliver': Nearly half of US data centers planned for 2026 canceled or delayed — and things could soon get much worse ChatGPT’s hidden backup model just got smarter — as OpenAI adds a cheaper Pro option Forget Big Mistakes — new Netflix true crime series Trust Me: The False Prophet is the only TV show you need to… 'The problem is not AI’s capability...what won’t improve on its own is the human side': Major study claims white-collar workers are fighting back against AI in the workplace Introducing Perspectives — the new home for premium contributed content on TechRadar Pro ‘Computers are no longer a bicycle for the mind’: Frameworks founder says the Steve Jobs era is over and PCs are now a ‘self-driving car that takes you directly to the destination’ No, Elon Musk doesn't want to give you a $5,000 tax refund — it's a scam, here's what to look out… ‘It’s a potential national security threat’: Proton study finds over 3,500 US legislators’ official emails leaked and exposed on the dark web ‘I want to cancel’: YouTube Premium quietly hikes its US prices for the first time in three years, forcing… RTX 5090s and other high-powered graphics cards may carry risks of cable melting issues — but Asus thinks it has… Former Xbox exec thinks Naughty Dog's decision to cancel the 80% completed The Last of Us Online 'was the right call', but it shouldn't have greenlit it in the first place — 'The ambition was there, but the realistic upfront planning wasn't', she says West Ham vs Wolves Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025/26 from anywhere in the world Microsoft warns worrying security flaw exposed over 50 million Android users, says 'user credentials and financial… ‘Apple will grit its teeth and push through’ — new report suggests the iPhone Air 2 isn’t dead,… Google Chrome rolls out a new tool to try and stop infostealer malware in its tracks 'Two Hells collide' — Doom: The Dark Ages and Diablo Immortal unite in a limited-time crossover event,… Spotify is rolling out new video controls, and as someone who hates its in-app music videos, I know this will be a huge… 8 new movies and TV shows to watch on Netflix, Prime Video, HBO Max, and more this weekend (April 10) AdGuard VPN has a new app for iPhone — and you can try it out for 7 days for free Currys refuses to end its Easter sale — I've found the 21 best tech deals that are still available Amazon is slashing prices on Garmin watches — save up to $350 on best-rated models for running, biking and hiking Inspired to start running this summer? Here are 8 brilliant running shoes I'd recommend for beginners NASA used a 12-year-old GoPro to capture a sight called the ‘greatest gift’ by Artemis II pilot — and… iPhone owners urged to change this key privacy setting after FBI recovers suspect’s deleted Signal messages How to read Murder in Purple and Gold online from anywhere Garmin's cashing in on the screenless Whoop-style smart band trend with its upcoming CIRQA — here's the… YouTube insists that a 90-sec, unskippable ad format 'isn't something we are testing' — but furious… ‘Everything is magenta’: This wild hack got Mac OS X Cheetah working on a Nintendo Wii, and I can’t… A new free-to-play Borderlands game gets surprise drop on mobile, which Zynga says is part of a 'limited-time… The Xiaomi 17 outmuscles the iPhone 17 and Galaxy S26 in several key areas — read our full review In a sea of PlayStation Portal cases, the one I value the most has yet to be beaten How to submit an article for TechRadar Pro Perspectives
Confidentiality is not security: Why the real AI runtime crisis Is the Authorization Gap
Mark O. Rogg · 2026-05-14 · via Latest from TechRadar

A comforting story is taking hold in enterprise cybersecurity circles: AI is broken at runtime because we haven't protected data while it's in use, and the answer is to wrap workloads in encrypted memory, hardware enclaves, and cryptographic attestation.

Get the confidentiality model right, the argument goes, and AI security will follow.

CEO and founder of EnforceAuth.

Confidentiality is necessary. It is not sufficient.

An AI workload running in a perfectly attested, fully encrypted enclave will, with complete fidelity, execute whatever instruction reaches it — including the instruction to exfiltrate a customer database, mutate a production config, or wire money to an attacker's account.

The enclave protects the bytes. It does not ask whether the action should happen.

That question — should this identity be permitted to take this action against this resource, in this context, right now? — is the question almost no one is answering at runtime.

Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!

That is the Authorization Gap, and it is where modern AI security is actually breaking.

The Wrong Diagnosis

The conventional diagnosis goes something like this: data has three states — at rest, in transit, in use — and the industry secured the first two but left the third exposed. Encrypt memory, isolate execution, attest the stack, and the runtime problem is solved.

This framing is a category error. It treats AI security as a data problem when it is, overwhelmingly, an identity management and action problem. The breaches that are actually happening, and the ones that will define the next wave of enterprise incidents, do not look like an attacker reading model weights out of RAM. They look like an over-privileged agent calling a tool it should never have been allowed to call.

They look like a fine-tuned model dutifully complying with a politely worded prompt that walks it through deleting production data. They look like a non-human identity — one of the dozens any given AI agent now spawns — holding credentials no human ever reviewed and using them against systems no policy ever constrained.

You cannot encrypt your way out of any of that. The decryption already happened. The attestation already passed. The workload is doing exactly what its memory says to do. The failure is upstream of memory: there was no enforcement point asking whether the action was authorized in the first place.

The Politeness Trap

There is a second, related illusion: that AI safety — the alignment, guardrail, and content-filtering work that keeps a model from producing harmful outputs — is the same thing as AI security. It is not. A model trained to be helpful, harmless, and honest will, by design, try to help.

When an attacker frames a malicious request as a reasonable business need, the model's safety training is precisely what makes it cooperate. We call this the Politeness Trap, and it is the reason that polite AI is not the same thing as secure AI.

Safety governs what a model is willing to do. Security governs what it is permitted to do. Confidential computing addresses neither. It addresses what the underlying hardware will reveal. Three different problems, three different control planes, and the industry keeps conflating them.

What Runtime Enforcement Actually Looks Like

The right question to ask about any AI system in production is not "is the memory encrypted?" It is: at the moment this agent attempts to take an action, who is enforcing the policy that decides whether it can?

In most enterprises today, the honest answer is: no one. Authorization logic is scattered across application code, IAM policies written for human users, IdP rules designed for SSO flows, and an accumulating sediment of hardcoded conditionals that nobody owns.

Non-human identities — service accounts, API keys, agent credentials, tool tokens — now outnumber human identities by 82 to one in a typical enterprise, and almost none of them are governed by a runtime enforcement layer. They are governed by hope.

Runtime authorization enforcement means something concrete. It means a policy decision point that sits in the request path of every AI action — every tool call, every data access, every downstream API invocation — and answers, in single-digit milliseconds, whether that specific identity is allowed to take that specific action against that specific resource under the current context.

It means policies expressed as code, versioned, tested, and auditable. It means the same enforcement applies whether the actor is a human, a service, a model, or an agent invoking another agent three hops deep.

It means that when something goes wrong — and something will go wrong — there is a decision log that tells you exactly which identity attempted what, and why it was allowed or denied.

This is not a theoretical architecture. It is a working pattern, deployed in production at enterprises that have already accepted that the perimeter is gone, that the network is not a trust boundary, and that the only place where AI security can actually be enforced is at the moment of the action itself.

Why Hardware Isolation Doesn't Close the Gap

There is a tempting move here, which is to argue that confidential computing and runtime authorization are complementary, and that enterprises should simply do both. That is true in the limited sense that any defense-in-depth posture benefits from more layers. But it misreads where the budget, the attention, and the architectural decisions are flowing.

The risk is that organizations adopt confidential computing, declare runtime security solved, and never build the authorization layer at all. They will have spent meaningfully to protect against a threat model — memory inspection by a compromised hypervisor or insider with physical access — that, while real, is dwarfed in frequency and impact by the threat that is actually playing out: agents and services with too much access, acting on instructions no one validated, against resources no one fenced.

If you have one runtime security budget to spend in 2026, spend it on enforcement, not encryption. The data-in-use problem is real. The authorization-in-use problem is bigger, more common, and the one that will show up in incident reports.

The Question Every CISO Should Be Asking

The diagnostic is straightforward. Pick any AI agent running in your environment today and ask three questions.

First: when this agent calls a tool, what policy decision point evaluates whether the call is allowed, and where does that evaluation happen? If the answer is "the application enforces it" or "the IdP handles it" or "we trust the agent framework," the runtime is unprotected.

Second: how many non-human identities does this agent assume in the course of completing a task, and who reviewed the permissions on each one? If the answer involves a service account created in 2022 with broad cloud privileges, the runtime is unprotected.

Third: if this agent were compromised — through prompt injection, a poisoned tool description, a supply-chain compromise of an MCP server — what is the blast radius? If the answer is "anything its credentials can reach," the runtime is unprotected.

None of those questions are answered by encrypting memory. All of them are answered by a runtime authorization enforcement layer.

The Real Shift

Security has indeed moved to the moment of use. That part of the prevailing narrative is correct. But the moment of use is defined by action, not by memory. It is defined by what an identity is permitted to do, not by whether the bytes describing that action are encrypted in transit through a CPU.

The organizations that recognize this will build AI systems that scale safely. The organizations that mistake confidentiality for security will build AI systems that scale their exposure.

The Authorization Gap is the gap between AI safety and AI security — between what a model is willing to do and what it is permitted to do. Closing that gap is the work of the next decade. It does not happen in silicon. It happens in policy, enforced at runtime, in the path of every decision an AI system makes.

Encrypt the memory. By all means. But do not confuse a locked room with a secure one. The lock on the door is not the same as the rule about who's allowed inside, and in the age of agentic AI, it is the rule — enforced, every time, in real time — that determines whether your enterprise is actually secure.

We've reviewed the best Antivirus Software.

This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives, our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.

The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit

CEO and founder of EnforceAuth.