PulseAugur
实时 23:35:49

New protocol rapidly revokes AI agent credentials

Researchers have developed a new cryptographic protocol called Heartbeat-Bound Hierarchical Credentials (HBHC) to address the safety gap in autonomous AI agent swarms. This protocol binds credential validity to periodic parent liveness proofs, allowing for rapid revocation without central network connectivity. Evaluations show HBHC significantly reduces the 'zombie agent' window, demonstrating a 90x improvement over existing methods and ensuring that revoked agents become unusable within a deterministic time bound. AI

影响 Enhances AI agent safety by enabling rapid revocation of credentials, preventing unauthorized operations.

排序理由 The cluster contains an academic paper detailing a new cryptographic protocol for AI safety.

在 arXiv cs.AI 阅读 →

AI 生成摘要 · Google Gemini · 来自 3 个来源。 我们如何撰写摘要 →

New protocol rapidly revokes AI agent credentials

报道来源 [3]

  1. arXiv cs.AI TIER_1 English(EN) · Saurabh Deochake ·

    Heartbeat-Bound Hierarchical Credentials: Cryptographic Revocation for AI Agent Swarms

    arXiv:2605.20704v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: Autonomous AI agents that spawn sub-agent swarms create a safety gap: existing credential revocation mechanisms, OAuth~2.0 introspection, OCSP, and W3C Status Lists, require network connectivity to a central authority, leaving ``z…

  2. arXiv cs.AI TIER_1 English(EN) · Saurabh Deochake ·

    Heartbeat-Bound Hierarchical Credentials: Cryptographic Revocation for AI Agent Swarms

    Autonomous AI agents that spawn sub-agent swarms create a safety gap: existing credential revocation mechanisms, OAuth~2.0 introspection, OCSP, and W3C Status Lists, require network connectivity to a central authority, leaving ``zombie agents'' executing privileged operations for…

  3. Hugging Face Daily Papers TIER_1 English(EN) ·

    Heartbeat-Bound Hierarchical Credentials: Cryptographic Revocation for AI Agent Swarms

    Autonomous AI agents that spawn sub-agent swarms create a safety gap: existing credential revocation mechanisms, OAuth~2.0 introspection, OCSP, and W3C Status Lists, require network connectivity to a central authority, leaving ``zombie agents'' executing privileged operations for…