🚀 Blue41 wins RSAC Launch Pad. Read more here.
Blue41’s Tim Van Hamme was featured in two national newspapers this week on the risks of prompt injection in AI systems.
In De Standaard, he explains indirect prompt injection — how hidden instructions in input data can trick AI models into carrying out malicious commands. He highlights why organizations need to factor these risks into their deployments from day one.
Around the same time, Het Nieuwsblad published a second feature, showing how resumes, documents, or emails can carry embedded instructions that mislead AI systems. Tim stresses that these manipulations are not just theoretical — they are already happening, often unnoticed.
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| Tim Van hamme on AI Security in Het Nieuwsblad |
This comes on top of earlier press coverage in De Tijd, after Blue41 appeared as a winning finalist at RSAC Launch Pad, an innovation competition at the world’s most influential cybersecurity conference.
At Blue41, our mission is to make AI-powered applications secure and reliable. Being asked to weigh in on these issues at a national press level reflects the urgency of the challenge.
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| The Flemish Financial Times on Blue41 at RSAC |