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CyCraft Launches XecGuard: LLM Firewall for Trustworthy AI

CyCraft Launches XecGuard: LLM Firewall for Trustworthy AI

The Sun13 hours ago
TAIPEI, TAIWAN - Media OutReach Newswire - 1 July 2025 - CyCraft, a leading AI cybersecurity firm, today announced the global launch of XecGuard, the industry's first plug-and-play LoRA security module purpose-built to defend Large Language Models (LLMs). XecGuard's introduction marks a pivotal moment for secure, trustworthy AI, addressing the critical security challenges posed by the rapid adoption of LLMs.
Trustworthy AI Matters
The transformative power of Large Language Models (LLMs) brings significant security uncertainty, requiring enterprises to urgently safeguard their AI models from malicious attacks like prompt injection, prompt extraction, and jailbreak attempts. Historically, AI security has been an 'optional add-on' rather than a fundamental feature, leaving valuable AI and data exposed. This oversight can compromise sensitive data, undermine service stability, and erode customer trust. CyCraft emphasizes that 'AI security must be a standard feature—not an optional add-on,' believing it's paramount for delivering stable and trustworthy intelligent services.
The Imminent Need for Proactive AI Defense
The need for immediate and effective AI security is more critical than ever before. As AI becomes increasingly embedded in core business operations, the attack surface expands exponentially, making proactive defenses an absolute necessity. CyCraft has leveraged its extensive 'battle-tested expertise across critical domains—including government, finance, and high-tech manufacturing' to precisely address these emerging AI-specific threats. The development of XecGuard signifies a shift from 'using AI to tackle cybersecurity challenges' to now 'using AI to protect AI' , ensuring that security and resilience are embedded from day one.
'AI security must be a standard feature—not an optional add-on,' stated Benson Wu, CEO, highlighting XecGuard's resilience and integration of experience from defending critical sectors. Jeremy Chiu, CTO and Co-Founder, emphasized, 'In the past, we used AI to tackle cybersecurity challenges; now, we're using AI to protect AI,' adding that XecGuard enables enterprises to confidently adopt AI and deliver trustworthy services. PK Tsung, CISO, concluded, 'With XecGuard, we're empowering enterprises to embed security and resilience from day one' as part of their vision for the world's most advanced AI security platform.
CyCraft's Solution: XecGuard Empowers Secure AI Deployment
CyCraft leads with the global launch of XecGuard, the industry's first plug-and-play LoRA security module purpose-built to defend LLMs. XecGuard provides robust protection against prompt injection, prompt extraction, and jailbreak attacks, ensuring enterprise-grade resilience for AI models. Its seamless deployment allows instant integration with any LLM without architectural modification, delivering powerful autonomous defense out of the box. XecGuard is available as a SaaS, an OpenAI-compatible LLM firewall on your cloud (e.g., AWS or Cloudflare Workers AI), or an embedded firewall for on-premises, NVIDIA-powered custom LLM servers. Rigorously validated on major open-source models like Llama 3B, Qwen3 4B, Gemma3 4B, and DeepSeek 8B, it consistently improves security resilience while preserving core performance, enabling even small models to achieve protection comparable to large commercial-grade systems.
Real-world validation through collaboration with APMIC, an NVIDIA partner, integrated XecGuard into the F1 open-source model, demonstrating an average 17.3% improvement in overall security defense scores and up to 30.1% in specific attack scenarios via LLM Red Teaming exercises. With XecGuard and the Safety LLM service, CyCraft delivers enterprise-grade AI security, accelerating the adoption of resilient and trustworthy AI across industries, empowering organizations to deploy AI securely, protect sensitive data, and drive innovation with confidence.
Even small models gain enterprise-level defenses, approaching large commercial-grade performance.
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Malaysian SMEs picking up on AI to drive growth
Malaysian SMEs picking up on AI to drive growth

New Straits Times

time5 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Malaysian SMEs picking up on AI to drive growth

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's digital ambitions, as outlined in the MyDIGITAL blueprint, aim to position the country as a regional digital economy leader. However, that vision will remain aspirational if local businesses, particularly small and medium enterprises (SMEs), do not accelerate their adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and other digital technologies. As neighbours such as Indonesia, Vietnam and Singapore continue to advance toward AI-enabled futures, Malaysian SMEs are uniquely positioned to seize this moment and lead a smarter, more inclusive wave of digital transformation. A new study by Lazada, in partnership with Kantar, titled Bridging the AI Gap: Online Seller Perceptions and Adoption Trends in Southeast Asia, reveals a key challenge: Malaysian sellers recognise AI's potential but have yet to fully embrace it. The study, which surveyed 1,214 online sellers across Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, found that 69 per cent of Malaysian respondents say they are familiar with AI, but only 26 per cent have adopted AI tools, representing a significant gap between awareness and application. This gap is not merely a technology issue. It reflects a broader set of challenges shaped by uneven access to education, infrastructure constraints, generational divides and varying levels of trust and understanding around AI. Beyond that, the findings also reveal that businesses are not standing still. Many are also carefully evaluating AI opportunities that align with their specific capacities and business models. Malaysian SMEs are increasingly aware of tools ranging from generative AI for content creation and marketing to chatbots and predictive analytics. Technologies like ChatGPT have helped bring AI into mainstream business conversations. 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'Writing is thinking': do students who use ChatGPT learn less?
'Writing is thinking': do students who use ChatGPT learn less?

The Star

time6 hours ago

  • The Star

'Writing is thinking': do students who use ChatGPT learn less?

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CBEX crypto scam: AI-hyped Ponzi scheme defrauds African investors
CBEX crypto scam: AI-hyped Ponzi scheme defrauds African investors

The Star

time7 hours ago

  • The Star

CBEX crypto scam: AI-hyped Ponzi scheme defrauds African investors

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"I knew it was a risk, but I thought I would be lucky to cash out before anything happened." CBEX used the "brandjacking" tactic, adopting an acronym similar to the China Beijing Equity Exchange to give it legitimacy. The platform claimed to be licensed in the US and said ST Technologies International was responsible for the AI trading signals, allowing it to operate in Nigeria under the corporate identity of ST Technologies International Ltd (Smart Treasure/Super Technology). It even obtained an anti-money laundering certificate from Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) this January, though the EFCC has clarified that this was only for "consultancy services", not for currency exchanges. 'Build trust' To add further legitimacy, CBEX claimed it was established a decade ago and the ST team eight years ago. In reality, it began operations in Nigeria last July, according to local media, before spreading to Kenya. 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A recent investigation by crypto analyst Specter linked CBEX's withdrawal wallets to darknet marketplace Huione Guarantee, a Cambodia-based platform known for providing illicit tools to facilitate crypto crime. The US Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) designated Huione Group a "primary money-laundering concern" in May, saying that it had facilitated more than US$4bil (RM17bil) in illegal transactions between August 2021 and January 2025. Following CBEX's collapse, Kenya's Capital Markets Authority issued an "Investor Alert" about unregulated platforms, and parliament is discussing a bill to regulate virtual assets. 'Never again' Nigeria's EFCC says it has arrested two people and put out warrants for eight others in Nigeria and Kenya. A new Investments and Securities Act expressly prohibits and criminalises Ponzi schemes. But investigations are lengthy and expensive. 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