As AI agents automate critical workloads, they remain vulnerable to indirect prompt injection (IPI) attacks. Current defenses rely on monitoring protocols that jointly evaluate an agent's Chain-of-Thought (CoT) and tool-use actions to ensure alignment with user intent. We demonstrate that these monitoring-based defenses can be bypassed via a novel Agent-as-a-Proxy attack, where prompt injection attacks treat the agent as a delivery mechanism, bypassing both agent and monitor simultaneously. While prior work on scalable oversight has focused on whether small monitors can supervise large agents, we show that even frontier-scale monitors are vulnerable. Large-scale monitoring models like Qwen2.5-72B can be bypassed by agents with similar capabilities, such as GPT-4o mini and Llama-3.1-70B. On the AgentDojo benchmark, we achieve a high attack success rate against AlignmentCheck and Extract-and-Evaluate monitors under diverse monitoring LLMs. Our findings suggest current monitoring-based agentic defenses are fundamentally fragile regardless of model scale.
Bypassing AI Control Protocols via Agent-as-a-Proxy Attacks
Agent-as-a-Proxy attacks can bypass monitoring-based defenses in AI agents by treating the agent as a delivery mechanism for prompt injection, demonstrating vulnerabilities in even large-scale monitoring systems.
- Year
- 2026
- Venue
- arXiv 2026
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- 2
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2602.05066ARXIV-DEFAULT
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