Close Menu
CrypThing
  • Directory
  • News
    • AI
    • Press Release
    • Altcoins
    • Memecoins
  • Analysis
  • Price Watch
  • Price Prediction
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
CrypThingCrypThing
  • Directory
  • News
    • AI
    • Press Release
    • Altcoins
    • Memecoins
  • Analysis
  • Price Watch
  • Price Prediction
CrypThing
Home»AI»Everyone is navigating AI security in real time — even Google
AI

Everyone is navigating AI security in real time — even Google

adminBy adminMay 25, 20266 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link Bluesky Reddit Telegram WhatsApp Threads
Everyone is navigating AI security in real time — even Google
Share
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Bluesky Reddit Telegram WhatsApp

I recently had the opportunity to sit down with Francis de Souza, COO of Google Cloud, backstage at an event in Los Angeles. Amid the din around us, de Souza, who speaks in the calm, measured manner of a university professor, offered useful advice for companies navigating the AI security moment we’re all living through, noting that “there’ll be a transition period, and then I think we get to this better place.”

He wasn’t speaking about Google at that moment, but it’s clear that even Google is still figuring things out.

De Souza’s core message was one security professionals have been trying to get executives to internalize for years, now made urgent by AI: security can’t be an afterthought. “As companies embark on this AI journey, they need to take a platform approach,” he said. “Security is not something you can bolt on later, and it’s not something you can leave up to employees to do on their own.” He warned specifically about “shadow AI” — employees reaching for consumer tools without organizational oversight — and argued that companies need to demand security, governance, and auditability from their platforms from the start. “There’s no such thing as an AI strategy without a data strategy and a security strategy. They need to go hand in hand.”

Worth noting: he wasn’t pitching Google Cloud alone. When I observed that his advice sounded like a Google advertisement, he pushed back. Google, he said, is committed to a multicloud approach, and he made the case that companies that think they’re operating on a single cloud almost certainly aren’t. “Even if they pick a single cloud, they’re relying on SaaS applications, there are business partners that may be using different clouds,” he said. “It’s important for companies to have a security posture that is consistent across clouds, across models.”

He also made the case that the threat landscape has changed so fundamentally that old defensive models are too slow. He noted that the average time between an initial breach and the handoff to the next stage of an attack has dropped from eight hours to 22 seconds, and that the attack surface has expanded well beyond the traditional network perimeter. “In addition to your usual estate, you have models now. You have data pipelines used to train the models. You have agents, you have prompts. All of this needs to be protected.”

One threat de Souza flagged that doesn’t get enough attention: agents moving through a company’s internal systems can surface forgotten data repositories that nobody has thought about in years. “A lot of organizations have old SharePoint servers [and access controls] they haven’t really updated, but it didn’t matter because nobody really knew where they were. But agents roaming your enterprise will find those data assets and will expose the data on them.”

The answer, in his view, is to meet machine speed with machine speed. “We’re now seeing the emergence of an AI-native, fully agentic defense where organizations can run agents driving their defense,” he said. “Instead of having a human-led defense or even a human in the loop, you can now have humans overseeing a fully agentic defense.” He added that this has become a leadership issue, not just a technology one. “This is a board-level issue and an executive team issue. It’s not just a security team’s issue.”

But even as AI takes on more of the defensive workload, the people qualified to oversee it are in short supply — and the vulnerabilities that AI itself is introducing are multiplying faster than security teams can address them. “We’re going to need people to deal with the bug-pocalypse,” LinkedIn’s chief information security officer Lea Kissner told the New York Times this week, adding that she doesn’t expect the industry to understand AI security in any sustainable long-term way for at least several years.

Which brings us back to the platform providers themselves. The Register has published a series of reports over the past several weeks documenting a wave of Google Cloud developers hit with five-figure bills following unauthorized API calls to Gemini models — services many of them had never used or intentionally enabled. The cases followed a familiar pattern: API keys originally deployed for Google Maps, placed publicly per Google’s own instructions, had quietly become capable of accessing Gemini after Google expanded their scope without clearly disclosing the change.

Rod Danan, CEO of interview-prep platform Prentus, said his bill hit $10,138 in roughly 30 minutes after attackers exploited his compromised API key. Isuru Fonseka, a Sydney-based developer whose account was similarly compromised, woke up to charges of roughly AUD $17,000 despite believing he had a $250 spending cap in place. What neither knew was that Google’s automated systems had upgraded their billing tiers based on account history, raising their effective ceilings to as high as $100,000 without explicit consent.

Google refunded both after The Register published its initial report. Still, Google told The Register it has no plans to change its automatic tier-upgrade policy, saying it prioritizes preventing service outages over enforcing users’ stated budget preferences.

In the meantime, there is the separate question of what happens when a developer tries to shut things down. The Register reported this week on research by security firm Aikido finding that even developers who catch a compromised key and immediately delete it may not be safe. According to Aikido’s findings, attackers can apparently continue using that key for up to 23 minutes because Google’s revocation propagates gradually across its infrastructure. Aikido researcher Joseph Leon told The Register that during that window, success rates are unpredictable — in some minutes over 90% of requests still authenticated — and attackers can use the time to exfiltrate files and cached conversation data from Gemini.

Leon also noted that Google’s own newer credential formats don’t appear to have the same problem: service account API credentials revoke in about five seconds, and Gemini’s newer AQ-prefixed key format takes about a minute. “Both run at Google scale,” he wrote in Aikido’s related paper. “Both suggest this is technically solvable for Google API keys, too.” In short, according to Leon, the 23-minute window isn’t an engineering constraint but a matter of priorities for the company.

That’s worth considering when reading de Souza’s advice, which is sound and should be taken very seriously. He’s not wrong, but there is currently a gap between the platforms are prescribing and how fast they are themselves adapating, and it’s good to be aware of this, too.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

2025 AI Google navigating October 27-29 Real San Francisco security Techcrunch event TechCrunch|BProud time Trumps
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link Bluesky WhatsApp Threads
Previous ArticleGold Slides 0.7% as DXY Holds Near 99.32 and 10-Year Yields Push Toward 4.6%
Next Article The Solana Meme Craze Is In Full Swing But Savvy Investors Are Quietly Pouring Into The Bitcoin Ecosystem
admin

Related Posts

Ferrari is using IBM’s AI to create F1 superfans

May 24, 2026

AI is being used to resurrect the voices of dead pilots

May 23, 2026

Spotify and Universal Music strike deal allowing fan-made AI covers and remixes

May 22, 2026
Trending News

Ethereum’s triangle collapse puts pressure on recovery prospects

May 17, 2026

Global Stocks Reach Record Highs As S&P 500 Surpasses 7,000 Milestone

April 22, 2026

AAVE Price Prediction: Targets $96 by Mid-April as DeFi Token Tests Critical Support

April 6, 2026

LDO Price Prediction: Lido DAO Targets $0.34 Resistance Test by Mid-April

April 5, 2026
About Us

At crypthing, we’re passionate about making the crypto world easier to (under)stand- and we believe everyone should feel welcome while doing it. Whether you're an experienced trader, a blockchain developer, or just getting started, we're here to share clear, reliable, and up-to-date information to help you grow.

Don't Miss

Reporters found that Zerebro founder was alive and inhaling his mother and father’ home, confirming that the suicide was staged

May 9, 2025

Openai launches initiatives to spread democratic AI through global partnerships

May 9, 2025

Stripe announces AI Foundation model for payments and introduces deeper Stablecoin integration

May 9, 2025
Top Posts

Ethereum’s triangle collapse puts pressure on recovery prospects

May 17, 2026

Global Stocks Reach Record Highs As S&P 500 Surpasses 7,000 Milestone

April 22, 2026

AAVE Price Prediction: Targets $96 by Mid-April as DeFi Token Tests Critical Support

April 6, 2026
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
© 2026 crypthing. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.