-
Word nerds have a weekend on the tiles at Thailand's Scrabble title
-
Cobolli stops thinking and quells Svajda fightback at French Open
-
Czech court orders German neo-Nazi provocateur's extradition
-
French Open happy with Sabalenka-Osaka in top slot, but men still have edge
-
Serena Williams announces return to tennis at Queen's Club
-
Serena Williams to return to tennis at Queen's Club
-
Polish qualifier Chwalinska continues dream Roland Garros run
-
'We need to act now': Race to develop Ebola vaccine heats up
-
Iran truce on the rocks as Israel presses into Lebanon
-
Fans furious at Travis Scott's 20-minute Istanbul debut set
-
Two Syrians deny civil war torture accusations in Austria trial
-
Oil prices jump as Iran suspends peace talks
-
India takes down giant Messi statue over safety concerns
-
South Africa World Cup squad depart for Mexico following visa delay
-
Nvidia PC chip hailed as 'game changer' in race for AI device
-
'Stop killing women': Kenyans protest femicide scourge
-
Sabalenka to face Osaka, Cobolli into French Open quarters
-
Kevin Keegan reveals stage four cancer diagnosis
-
Cobolli fights into French Open last eight against dogged Svajda
-
Kalinskaya battles into French Open quarter-finals
-
Survey finds generational gap in attitudes to AI romance
-
Israel orders strikes on Beirut ahead of UN meeting
-
Premier League record-breaker Milner retires
-
Russia fired record 8,150 drones at Ukraine in May: AFP analysis
-
Peru's presidential candidates clash on crime, 'political mafia'
-
Macron announces 93 bn euros in 'Choose France' investments
-
Slot says he is leaving Liverpool 'among Europe's elite'
-
Huge state subsidies give China unfair edge over foreign rivals: OECD
-
French Open fines Vallejo for 'unacceptable' sexist outburst
-
France seizes Russia-linked oil tanker with ties to Iranian magnate
-
Mexican goalkeeper Ochoa set for historic sixth World Cup
-
Philippine senator arrested in flood control scandal
-
Premier League record-breaker James Milner retires
-
Work begins on 2032 Brisbane Olympics stadium after protests
-
New Zealand government in talks to save rugby's Moana Pasifika
-
China issues new rules to bust 'ghost' takeout deliveries
-
Kohli dubbed 'heartbeat' of IPL champions in coach Flower tribute
-
Australia economy minister says 'legitimate' fears driving rise of far-right
-
Australia scrum-half Gordon out of Tests after Achilles surgery
-
US, Iran exchange fire as negotiations stall
-
Sooryavanshi sweeps IPL awards -- but is too young to drive prize
-
In Finland, radioactive spent nuclear fuel soon to be buried underground
-
UN to meet on Lebanon after Israel takes Beaufort castle
-
Nvidia launches Windows laptop chip in consumer PC push
-
Popovic tells youthful Australia to be 'fearless' at World Cup
-
Asian equities ahead, oil rises as uncertainty surrounds US-Iran talks
-
Sabalenka, Osaka clash in blockbuster French Open tie
-
'AI simply can't replicate it': Japan embraces zine trend
-
In Colorado, Trump cuts to climate research take toll
-
Hollywood honors Marilyn Monroe, 100 years after her birth
Tenzai Expands Its AI Hacker to AI Applications
The record-breaking autonomous offensive security company extends its full-stack testing to include AI systems, covering web, API, and AI application layers in a single run.
NEW YORK CITY, NY / ACCESS Newswire / June 1, 2026 / Tenzai, the autonomous offensive security company ranked top 1% against 125,000 human hackers across six global platforms, today announced the extension of its AI hacker to include AI applications, enabling enterprise security teams to test the complete attack surface of modern AI systems, from the web layer and APIs through to the AI application itself.

Today's announcement comes as AI applications enter production at a pace that has outrun existing security infrastructure. Gartner projects that 40% of enterprise applications will embed task-specific AI agents by the end of 2026, up from less than 5% in 2025. A significant share of those applications are being built by AI coding agents, with Tenzai's own research finding that every major AI coding tool - Cursor, Claude Code, Codex, and Devin - shipped vulnerable code when tested against identical prompts and environments. Independent research corroborates the pattern: 45% of AI-generated code samples introduce OWASP Top 10 vulnerabilities, and the consequences are compounding - March 2026 alone saw more CVEs directly attributed to AI-generated code than all of 2025 combined.
A Different Approach to AI Application Security
Tenzai's approach to AI application security is different from the market norm. The majority of AI application security tooling in the market today was built from the model outward: it tests whether the model resists prompt injection, whether it leaks training data, or whether guardrails hold. Tenzai's approach starts from the full attack surface and works inward.
That distinction matters because of what AI application vulnerabilities actually look like in practice. A prompt injection is often the entry point, but the underlying vulnerability is excessive tool authority, a missing authorization check, or a credential that propagates to a workflow that shouldn't inherit it. These are classic security bugs made reachable through the AI layer. Finding them requires an agent that understands both the AI behavior and the infrastructure it operates in.
When Tenzai's agent encounters an AI application, it does not run a prompt-injection checklist against the model. It maps the application as a set of actors, instructions, tools, credentials, guardrails, state transitions, and endpoints and generates leads across all of them.
"The most consequential vulnerabilities in AI applications don't live in the model, they live in what the model-driven agents have access to," said Pavel Gurvich, CEO and cofounder of Tenzai. "Expanding Tenzai's AI hacker to AI applications is the natural next step: our hacker already traces attack paths across the web layer, the APIs, and now the AI behavior in the same run, continuously, with every test building on what the last one learned. The findings that matter are almost always chains, so testing one layer in isolation, or testing once a quarter, misses them."
Watch a demo and read more about Tenzai's AI application hacking here: LINK
About Tenzai:
Tenzai is an AI-native cybersecurity company building autonomous AI hackers to ensure enterprises deliver unbreakable code. Its platform actively hacks, exploits, and helps fix vulnerabilities across enterprise software - continuously and at scale. Founded in 2025 by cybersecurity veterans Pavel Gurvich, Ariel Zeitlin, Ofri Ziv, Itamar Tal, and Aner Mazur, Tenzai has raised $75 million in seed funding from leading investors including Battery Ventures, Greylock Partners, Lux Capital, and Swish Ventures. Read more: www.tenzai.com
Media contact:
Itai Singer, TellNY
[email protected]
SOURCE: Tenzai
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
H.E.Young--AMWN