Prompt injection attacks pose a serious threat to anyone who uses AI tools, but especially to professionals who rely on them at work. By exploiting a vulnerability that affects most AIs, a hacker can insert malicious code into a text prompt, which may then alter the results or even steal confidential data. Also: 5 custom ChatGPT instructions I use to get better AI results - faster Now, OpenAI has introduced a feature called Lockdown Mode to better thwart these types of attacks.
"Snowflake is committing up to $200 million to purchase access to OpenAI's frontier models and ChatGPT Enterprise over the course of the multi-year agreement," Baris Gultekin, Snowflake's vice president of AI, told The Register. "This reflects Snowflake's conviction that providing OpenAI technology to our enterprise customer base, at scale and with enterprise-grade reliability, is strategically important. It is a commercial commitment anchored in real AI consumption by Snowflake customers, not a speculative or symbolic partnership."
When legal headlines talk about AI, it's usually all hype or all fear. Either we're replacing lawyers with robots or bracing for doomsday. But back on Earth, where work still has to get done, AI is a business decision, not an existential dilemma. An important decision that legal departments, especially lean ones, need to make with clarity, not chaos. Enter the Hanna Center: a nonprofit that treated AI not as a headline but as a workflow challenge.