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Data drift happens when the statistical properties of a machine learning (ML) model’s input data change over time, eventually rendering its predictions less accurate. Cybersecurity professionals who rely on ML for tasks like malware detection and network threat analysis find that undetected data drift can create vulnerabilities. A model trained on old attack patterns may fail to see today’s sophisticated threats. Recognizing the early signs of data drift is the first step in maintaining reliable and efficient security systems.
ML models are trained on a snapshot of historical data. When live data no longer resembles this snapshot, the model’s performance dwindles, creating a critical cybersecurity risk. A threat detection model may generate more false negatives by missing real breaches or create more false positives, leading to alert fatigue for security teams.
Adversaries actively exploit this weakness. In 2024, attackers used echo-spoofing techniques to bypass email protection services. By exploiting misconfigurations in the system, they sent millions of spoofed emails that evaded the vendor’s ML classifiers. This incident demonstrates how threat actors can manipulate input data to exploit blind spots. When a security model fails to adapt to shifting tactics, it becomes a liability.
Security professionals can recognize the presence of drift (or its potential) in several ways.
Accuracy, precision, and recall are often the first casualties. A consistent decline in these key metrics is a red flag that the model is no longer in sync with the current threat landscape.
Consider Klarna’s success: Its AI assistant handled 2.3 million customer service conversations in its first month and performed work equivalent to 700 agents. This efficiency drove a 25% decline in repeat inquiries and reduced resolution times to under two minutes.
Now imagine if those parameters suddenly reversed because of drift. In a security context, a similar drop in performance does not just mean unhappy clients — it also means successful intrusions and potential data exfiltration.
Security teams should monitor the core statistical properties of input features, such as the mean, median, and standard deviation. A significant change in these metrics from training data could indicate the underlying data has changed.
Monitoring for such shifts enables teams to catch drift before it causes a breach. For example, a phishing detection model might be trained on emails with an average attachment size of 2MB. If the average attachment size suddenly jumps to 10MB due to a new malware-delivery method, the model may fail to classify these emails correctly.
Even if overall accuracy seems stable, distributions of predictions might change, a phenomenon often referred to as prediction drift.
For instance, if a fraud detection model historically flagged 1% of transactions as suspicious but suddenly starts flagging 5% or 0.1%, either something has shifted or the nature of the input data has changed. It might indicate a new type of attack that confuses the model or a change in legitimate user behavior that the model was not trained to identify.
For models that provide a confidence score or probability with their predictions, a general decrease in confidence can be a subtle sign of drift.
Recent studies highlight the value of uncertainty quantification in detecting adversarial attacks. If the model becomes less sure about its forecasts across the board, it is likely facing data it was not trained on. In a cybersecurity setting, this uncertainty is an early sign of potential model failure, suggesting the model is operating in unfamiliar ground and that its decisions might no longer be reliable.
The correlation between different input features can also change over time. In a network intrusion model, traffic volume and packet size might be highly linked during normal operations. If that correlation disappears, it can signal a change in network behavior that the model may not understand. A sudden feature decoupling could indicate a new tunneling tactic or a stealthy exfiltration attempt.
Common detection methods include the Kolmogorov-Smirnov (KS) and the population stability index (PSI). These compare the distributions of live and training data to identify deviations. The KS test determines if two datasets differ significantly, while the PSI measures how much a variable’s distribution has shifted over time.
The mitigation method of choice often depends on how the drift manifests, as distribution changes may occur suddenly. For example, customers’ buying behavior may change overnight with the launch of a new product or a promotion. In other cases, drift may occur gradually over a more extended period. That said, security teams must learn to adjust their monitoring cadence to capture both rapid spikes and slow burns. Mitigation will involve retraining the model on more recent data to reclaim its effectiveness.
Data drift is an inevitable reality, and cybersecurity teams can maintain a strong security posture by treating detection as a continuous and automated process. Proactive monitoring and model retraining are fundamental practices to ensure ML systems remain reliable allies against developing threats.
Zac Amos is the Features Editor at ReHack.
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For the last 18 months, the CISO playbook for generative AI has been relatively simple: Control the browser.
Security teams tightened cloud access security broker (CASB) policies, blocked or monitored traffic to well-known AI endpoints, and routed usage through sanctioned gateways. The operating model was clear: If sensitive data leaves the network for an external API call, we can observe it, log it, and stop it. But that model is starting to break.
A quiet hardware shift is pushing large language model (LLM) usage off the network and onto the endpoint. Call it Shadow AI 2.0, or the “bring your own model” (BYOM) era: Employees running capable models locally on laptops, offline, with no API calls and no obvious network signature. The governance conversation is still framed as “data exfiltration to the cloud,” but the more immediate enterprise risk is increasingly “unvetted inference inside the device.”
When inference happens locally, traditional data loss prevention (DLP) doesn’t see the interaction. And when security can’t see it, it can’t manage it.
Two years ago, running a useful LLM on a work laptop was a niche stunt. Today, it’s routine for technical teams.
Three things converged:
Consumer-grade accelerators got serious: A MacBook Pro with 64GB unified memory can often run quantized 70B-class models at usable speeds (with practical limits on context length). What once required multi-GPU servers is now feasible on a high-end laptop for many real workflows.
Quantization went mainstream: It’s now easy to compress models into smaller, faster formats that fit within laptop memory often with acceptable quality tradeoffs for many tasks.
Distribution is frictionless: Open-weight models are a single command away, and the tooling ecosystem makes “download → run → chat” trivial.
The result: An engineer can pull down a multi‑GB model artifact, turn off Wi‑Fi, and run sensitive workflows locally, source code review, document summarization, drafting customer communications, even exploratory analysis over regulated datasets. No outbound packets, no proxy logs, no cloud audit trail.
From a network-security perspective, that activity can look indistinguishable from “nothing happened”.
If the data isn’t leaving the laptop, why should a CISO care?
Because the dominant risks shift from exfiltration to integrity, provenance, and compliance. In practice, local inference creates three classes of blind spots that most enterprises have not operationalized.
Local models are often adopted because they’re fast, private, and “no approval required.” The downside is that they’re frequently unvetted for the enterprise environment.
A common scenario: A senior developer downloads a community-tuned coding model because it benchmarks well. They paste in internal auth logic, payment flows, or infrastructure scripts to “clean it up.” The model returns output that looks competent, compiles, and passes unit tests, but subtly degrades security posture (weak input validation, unsafe defaults, brittle concurrency changes, dependency choices that aren’t allowed internally). The engineer commits the change.
If that interaction happened offline, you may have no record that AI influenced the code path at all. And when you later do incident response, you’ll be investigating the symptom (a vulnerability) without visibility into a key cause (uncontrolled model usage).
Many high-performing models ship with licenses that include restrictions on commercial use, attribution requirements, field-of-use limits, or obligations that can be incompatible with proprietary product development. When employees run models locally, that usage can bypass the organization’s normal procurement and legal review process.
If a team uses a non-commercial model to generate production code, documentation, or product behavior, the company can inherit risk that shows up later during M&A diligence, customer security reviews, or litigation. The hard part is not just the license terms, it’s the lack of inventory and traceability. Without a governed model hub or usage record, you may not be able to prove what was used where.
Local inference also changes the software supply chain problem. Endpoints begin accumulating large model artifacts and the toolchains around them: ownloaders, converters, runtimes, plugins, UI shells, and Python packages.
There is a critical technical nuance here: The file format matters. While newer formats like Safetensors are designed to prevent arbitrary code execution, older Pickle-based PyTorch files can execute malicious payloads simply when loaded. If your developers are grabbing unvetted checkpoints from Hugging Face or other repositories, they aren’t just downloading data — they could be downloading an exploit.
Security teams have spent decades learning to treat unknown executables as hostile. BYOM requires extending that mindset to model artifacts and the surrounding runtime stack. The biggest organizational gap today is that most companies have no equivalent of a software bill of materials for models: Provenance, hashes, allowed sources, scanning, and lifecycle management.
You can’t solve local inference by blocking URLs. You need endpoint-aware controls and a developer experience that makes the safe path the easy path.
Here are three practical ways:
1. Move governance down to the endpoint
Network DLP and CASB still matter for cloud usage, but they’re not sufficient for BYOM. Start treating local model usage as an endpoint governance problem by looking for specific signals:
Inventory and detection: Scan for high-fidelity indicators like .gguf files larger than 2GB, processes like llama.cpp or Ollama, and local listeners on common default port 11434.
Process and runtime awareness: Monitor for repeated high GPU/NPU (neural processing unit) utilization from unapproved runtimes or unknown local inference servers.
Device policy: Use mobile device management (MDM) and endpoint detection and response (EDR) policies to control installation of unapproved runtimes and enforce baseline hardening on engineering devices. The point isn’t to punish experimentation. It’s to regain visibility.
2. Provide a paved road: An internal, curated model hub
Shadow AI is often an outcome of friction. Approved tools are too restrictive, too generic, or too slow to approve. A better approach is to offer a curated internal catalog that includes:
Approved models for common tasks (coding, summarization, classification)
Verified licenses and usage guidance
Pinned versions with hashes (prioritizing safer formats like Safetensors)
Clear documentation for safe local usage, including where sensitive data is and isn’t allowed. If you want developers to stop scavenging, give them something better.
3. Update policy language: “Cloud services” isn’t enough anymore
Most acceptable use policies talk about SaaS and cloud tools. BYOM requires policy that explicitly covers:
Downloading and running model artifacts on corporate endpoints
Acceptable sources
License compliance requirements
Rules for using models with sensitive data
Retention and logging expectations for local inference tools This doesn’t need to be heavy-handed. It needs to be unambiguous.
For a decade we moved security controls “up” into the cloud. Local inference is pulling a meaningful slice of AI activity back “down” to the endpoint.
5 signals shadow AI has moved to endpoints:
Large model artifacts: Unexplained storage consumption by .gguf or .pt files.
Local inference servers: Processes listening on ports like 11434 (Ollama).
GPU utilization patterns: Spikes in GPU usage while offline or disconnected from VPN.
Lack of model inventory: Inability to map code outputs to specific model versions.
License ambiguity: Presence of “non-commercial” model weights in production builds.
Shadow AI 2.0 isn’t a hypothetical future, it’s a predictable consequence of fast hardware, easy distribution, and developer demand. CISOs who focus only on network controls will miss what’s happening on the silicon sitting right on employees’ desks.
The next phase of AI governance is less about blocking websites and more about controlling artifacts, provenance, and policy at the endpoint, without killing productivity.
Jayachander Reddy Kandakatla is a senior MLOps engineer.
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