Agentic applications are programs that leverage AI agents — software designed to autonomously collect data and take actions toward specific objectives — to drive their functionality. As AI agents are becoming more widely adopted in real-world applications, understanding their security implications is critical.
This article investigates ways attackers can target agentic applications, presenting nine concrete attack scenarios that result in outcomes such as information leakage, credential theft, tool exploitation and remote code execution. To assess how widely applicable these risks are, we implemented two functionally identical applications using different open-source agent frameworks — CrewAI and AutoGen — and executed the same attacks on both. Palo Alto findings show that most vulnerabilities and attack vectors are largely framework-agnostic, arising from insecure design patterns, misconfigurations and unsafe tool integrations, rather than flaws in the frameworks themselves.
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Source: Palo Alto Unit 42
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