G6g9.putty PDocsCybersecurity
Related
Understanding the V8 Sandbox: A New Step Toward Memory SafetyWindows 11 Remote Desktop Bug: Everything You Need to KnowUnderstanding and Defending Against AI-Enabled Cyber Threats: A Practical GuideOracle Accelerates Patch Cycles to Monthly: Countering AI-Enabled Threat DiscoveryApril 2026 Patch Tuesday: A Comprehensive Guide to Securing Your SystemsSecuring the Age of AI Agents: Preventing Identity Theft in a Zero-Trust WorldNavigating the 2025 Financial Cyberthreat Landscape: Trends and Future OutlookBreaking: Major Cybersecurity Incidents Unfold – 2.6M Employee Benefits Records Exposed, AI Platforms Under Siege

Browser-Based Data Exfiltration Exposes Critical DLP Blind Spot

Last updated: 2026-05-10 05:12:12 · Cybersecurity

Breaking: Traditional DLP Controls Miss Growing Threat from Browser Activities

New research from cybersecurity firm Keep Aware reveals that browser-based actions—such as copy/paste operations and AI prompts—are silently circumventing traditional Data Loss Prevention (DLP) systems. The study highlights a dangerous blind spot: modern work happens in the browser, but most DLP tools were designed for legacy applications.

Browser-Based Data Exfiltration Exposes Critical DLP Blind Spot
Source: www.bleepingcomputer.com

“Your security controls aren’t failing—they’re missing where most of today’s work actually takes place,” said a Keep Aware spokesperson. “The browser has become the primary workplace, and DLP isn’t watching it.”

Key Findings: How Data Slips Past Controls

Keep Aware’s analysis shows that standard actions like copying sensitive text from a corporate web app into an AI chatbot or pasting customer data into an unsanctioned cloud tool are rarely flagged. “These are everyday user activities that DLP tools were never built to monitor,” the report states.

The research also found that AI-powered assistants, now embedded in many browsers, can access confidential information without triggering alerts. “Employees don’t see it as risky—they’re just trying to be productive,” noted a senior security analyst briefed on the findings.

Background: The Browser as the New Workplace

The shift to remote and hybrid work has made the browser the central hub for email, document editing, CRM systems, and even internal communications. Yet DLP solutions largely focus on email attachments, USB drives, and file transfers—channels that have shrunk in importance.

Browser-Based Data Exfiltration Exposes Critical DLP Blind Spot
Source: www.bleepingcomputer.com

“Organizations invested heavily in DLP for email and file servers, but the data exfiltration landscape has moved to browser-based workflows,” said the analyst. “This isn’t a failure of existing tools—it’s a gap in coverage.”

What This Means: Urgent Need for Browser-Focused DLP

The findings suggest companies must extend DLP policies to the browser, including monitoring copy/paste logs and interactions with AI platforms. “It’s not about restricting productivity; it’s about adding visibility to the blind spot,” emphasized the Keep Aware spokesperson.

Experts recommend deploying browser extensions or cloud access security brokers (CASBs) that can inspect browser activity in real time. “Without this, sensitive data will keep flowing out through everyday actions—unnoticed and unblocked.”

Immediate steps include auditing AI tool usage across the organization and implementing policies that require approval for pasting internal data into external applications. “The risk isn’t theoretical—it’s happening right now,” the report concludes.