The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has released new guidance warning that insider threats represent a major and growing risk to organizational security. The advisory was issued during the same week reports emerged about a senior agency official mishandling sensitive information, drawing renewed attention to the dangers posed by internal security lapses.
In its announcement, CISA described insider threats as risks that originate from within an organization and can arise from either malicious intent or accidental mistakes. The agency stressed that trusted individuals with legitimate system access can unintentionally cause serious harm to data security, operational stability, and public confidence.
To help organizations manage these risks, CISA published an infographic outlining how to create a structured insider threat management team. The agency recommends that these teams include professionals from multiple departments, such as human resources, legal counsel, cybersecurity teams, IT leadership, and threat analysis units. Depending on the situation, organizations may also need to work with external partners, including law enforcement or health and risk professionals.
According to CISA, these teams are responsible for overseeing insider threat programs, identifying early warning signs, and responding to potential risks before they escalate into larger incidents. The agency also pointed organizations to additional free resources, including a detailed mitigation guide, training workshops, and tools to evaluate the effectiveness of insider threat programs.
Acting CISA Director Madhu Gottumukkala emphasized that insider threats can undermine trust and disrupt critical operations, making them particularly challenging to detect and prevent.
Shortly before the guidance was released, media reports revealed that Gottumukkala had uploaded sensitive CISA contracting documents into a public version of an AI chatbot during the previous summer. According to unnamed officials, the activity triggered automated security alerts designed to prevent unauthorized data exposure from federal systems.
CISA’s Director of Public Affairs later confirmed that the chatbot was used with specific controls in place and stated that the usage was limited in duration. The agency noted that the official had received temporary authorization to access the tool and last used it in mid-July 2025.
By default, CISA blocks employee access to public AI platforms unless an exception is granted. The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees CISA, also operates an internal AI system designed to prevent sensitive government information from leaving federal networks.
Security experts caution that data shared with public AI services may be stored or processed outside the user’s control, depending on platform policies. This makes such tools particularly risky when handling government or critical infrastructure information.
The incident adds to a series of reported internal disputes and security-related controversies involving senior leadership, as well as similar lapses across other US government departments in recent years. These cases are a testament to how poor internal controls and misuse of personal or unsecured technologies can place national security and critical infrastructure at risk.
While CISA’s guidance is primarily aimed at critical infrastructure operators and regional governments, recent events suggest that insider threat management remains a challenge across all levels of government. As organizations increasingly rely on AI and interconnected digital systems, experts continue to stress that strong oversight, clear policies, and leadership accountability are essential to reducing insider-related security risks.
Google has updated its Chrome browser by adding a built-in artificial intelligence panel powered by its Gemini model, marking a stride toward automated web interaction. The change reflects the company’s broader push to integrate AI directly into everyday browsing activities.
Chrome, which currently holds more than 70 percent of the global browser market, is now moving in the same direction as other browsers that have already experimented with AI-driven navigation. The idea behind this shift is to allow users to rely on AI systems to explore websites, gather information, and perform online actions with minimal manual input.
The Gemini feature appears as a sidebar within Chrome, reducing the visible area of websites to make room for an interactive chat interface. Through this panel, users can communicate with the AI while keeping their main work open in a separate tab, allowing multitasking without constant tab switching.
Google explains that this setup can help users organize information more effectively. For example, Gemini can compare details across multiple open tabs or summarize reviews from different websites, helping users make decisions more quickly.
For subscribers to Google’s higher-tier AI plans, Chrome now offers an automated browsing capability. This allows Gemini to act as a software agent that can follow instructions involving multiple steps. In demonstrations shared by Google, the AI can analyze images on a webpage, visit external shopping platforms, identify related products, and add items to a cart while staying within a user-defined budget. The final purchase, however, still requires user approval.
The browser update also includes image-focused AI tools that allow users to create or edit images directly within Chrome, further expanding the browser’s role beyond simple web access.
Chrome’s integration with other applications has also been expanded. With user consent, Gemini can now interact with productivity tools, communication apps, media services, navigation platforms, and shopping-related Google services. This gives the AI broader context when assisting with tasks.
Google has indicated that future updates will allow Gemini to remember previous interactions across websites and apps, provided users choose to enable this feature. The goal is to make AI assistance more personalized over time.
Despite these developments, automated browsing faces resistance from some websites. Certain platforms have already taken legal or contractual steps to limit AI-driven activity, particularly for shopping and transactions. This underlines the ongoing tension between automation and website control.
To address these concerns, Google says Chrome will request human confirmation before completing sensitive actions such as purchases or social media posts. The browser will also support an open standard designed to allow AI-driven commerce in collaboration with participating retailers.
Currently, these features are available on Chrome for desktop systems in the United States, with automated browsing restricted to paid subscribers. How widely such AI-assisted browsing will be accepted across the web remains uncertain.
Cybersecurity researchers are cautioning users against installing certain browser extensions that claim to improve ChatGPT functionality, warning that some of these tools are being used to steal sensitive data and gain unauthorized access to user accounts.
These extensions, primarily found on the Chrome Web Store, present themselves as productivity boosters designed to help users work faster with AI tools. However, recent analysis suggests that a group of these extensions was intentionally created to exploit users rather than assist them.
Researchers identified at least 16 extensions that appear to be connected to a single coordinated operation. Although listed under different names, the extensions share nearly identical technical foundations, visual designs, publishing timelines, and backend infrastructure. This consistency indicates a deliberate campaign rather than isolated security oversights.
As AI-powered browser tools become more common, attackers are increasingly leveraging their popularity. Many malicious extensions imitate legitimate services by using professional branding and familiar descriptions to appear trustworthy. Because these tools are designed to interact deeply with web-based AI platforms, they often request extensive permissions, which exponentially increases the potential impact of abuse.
Unlike conventional malware, these extensions do not install harmful software on a user’s device. Instead, they take advantage of how browser-based authentication works. To operate as advertised, the extensions require access to active ChatGPT sessions and advanced browser privileges. Once installed, they inject hidden scripts into the ChatGPT website that quietly monitor network activity.
When a logged-in user interacts with ChatGPT, the platform sends background requests that include session tokens. These tokens serve as temporary proof that a user is authenticated. The malicious extensions intercept these requests, extract the tokens, and transmit them to external servers controlled by the attackers.
Possession of a valid session token allows attackers to impersonate users without needing passwords or multi-factor authentication. This can grant access to private chat histories and any external services connected to the account, potentially exposing sensitive personal or organizational information. Some extensions were also found to collect additional data, including usage patterns and internal access credentials generated by the extension itself.
Investigators also observed synchronized publishing behavior, shared update schedules, and common server infrastructure across the extensions, reinforcing concerns that they are part of a single, organized effort.
While the total number of installations remains relatively low, estimated at fewer than 1,000 downloads, security experts warn that early-stage campaigns can scale rapidly. As AI-related extensions continue to grow in popularity, similar threats are likely to emerge.
Experts advise users to carefully evaluate browser extensions before installation, pay close attention to permission requests, and remove tools that request broad access without clear justification. Staying cautious is increasingly important as browser-based attacks become more subtle and harder to detect.