AiBlogBot — agentic threat model
AiBlogBot presents a moderate risk profile primarily due to its integration with external WordPress sites, where credential theft or prompt injection could lead to unauthorized content publishing and SEO defacement.
OWASP AIVSS score rationale
| Autonomy of Action | 0.50 | |
| Goal-Driven Planning | 0.30 | |
| Self-Modification | 0.00 | |
| Dynamic Tool Use | 0.40 | |
| Persistent Memory | 0.20 | |
| Contextual Awareness | 0.40 | |
| Dynamic Identity | 0.30 | |
| Multi-Agent Interactions | 0.00 | |
| Non-Determinism | 0.60 | |
| Opacity & Reflexivity | 0.40 |
Scored with the canonical OWASP AIVSS formula (AIVSS calculator reference); agentic risk factors estimated from the agent’s described capabilities.
MAESTRO 7-layer threat model
Per-layer threats for this agent. Layers tagged “not certain from listing” are general, caveated commentary where the public description didn’t pin that layer.
Not certain from the listing — likely relies on third-party LLMs. Main threats include prompt injection causing the model to generate malicious code, spam, or brand-damaging content.
Not certain from the listing — processes user-provided context and keyword data. Risks include data exfiltration of proprietary business context or injection of malicious SEO keywords.
Orchestrates keyword research, content generation, and WordPress publishing. Threat of tool misuse where compromised orchestration could allow unauthorized publishing or modification of existing blog posts.
Not certain from the listing — hosted as a closed-source SaaS. The primary infrastructure threat is the insecure storage of WordPress credentials or API keys within the platform's database.
Not certain from the listing — no mention of automated guardrails or output monitoring. While a manual review editor is provided, automated publishing pipelines may lack drift and anomaly detection.
Handles sensitive WordPress integration credentials. The listing does not cite security certifications (e.g., SOC2) or robust access controls, presenting compliance risks for enterprise deployments.
Not certain from the listing — operates as a standalone SaaS tool with no described multi-agent or marketplace ecosystem interactions.
MAESTRO — the 7-layer agentic threat-modeling framework (Cloud Security Alliance / Ken Huang).
These scores are auto-generated from public information (the agent's own listing, docs, and repository) using the canonical OWASP AIVSS formula and the MAESTRO framework — an estimate for guidance, not a penetration test, audit, or certification. See the scoring methodology. Are you the vendor? Factual corrections are free.