

How AI is Transforming Cybersecurity
AI agents are already writing code, managing infrastructure, and making decisions with real access to real systems. That's the upside. It's also a new attack surface.
Agents introduce risks traditional security teams haven't had to think about: prompt injection turns an agent's own instructions into a social engineering target, and an adversary with agentic tooling can move faster and dig deeper than a human ever could. At the same time, agents create real opportunities: automated code audits, faster vulnerability remediation, and monitoring that catches what humans miss.
OpenHands and Gray Swan are teaming up to walk through both sides: how agents get exploited, and how to build ones that hold up under real attack.
What we'll cover
How AI agents actually work (the model, the prompt, and the tools you give it)
The cybersecurity risks unique to agents: attack surface, prompt injection, and AI-aided attacks
How to secure agents, and how to use agents to secure everything else
Live discussion and Q&A
Speakers
Graham Neubig, Chief Scientist at OpenHands
Matt Fredrikson, CEO/Co-founder at Gray Swan
Who should attend
Security engineers, platform and infrastructure teams, and engineering leaders evaluating how to roll out AI agents without opening up new risks.
About OpenHands
OpenHands is the foundation for secure, transparent, model-agnostic coding agents, empowering every software team to build faster with full control.
About Gray Swan
Gray Swan provides enterprise-grade security solutions for LLMs, developed by the pioneers of AI vulnerability research.