Storyha AI — agentic threat model
Storyha AI is a low-risk, human-in-the-loop creative writing assistant with minimal agentic capabilities, posing virtually no threat of autonomous real-world impact or tool misuse.
OWASP AIVSS score rationale
| Autonomy of Action | 0.10 | |
| Goal-Driven Planning | 0.20 | |
| Self-Modification | 0.00 | |
| Dynamic Tool Use | 0.00 | |
| Persistent Memory | 0.20 | |
| Contextual Awareness | 0.30 | |
| Dynamic Identity | 0.00 | |
| Multi-Agent Interactions | 0.00 | |
| Non-Determinism | 0.70 | |
| 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 commercial or open-source LLMs tuned for creative writing. Primary threats include prompt injection to bypass safety filters (generating NSFW/harmful content) and model output misalignment.
Not certain from the listing — likely stores user-generated stories, character profiles, and prompts in a standard database. Threats include unauthorized access to user intellectual property and potential data leakage if user inputs are used for downstream training.
Not certain from the listing — the tool appears to be a standard LLM-backed web application rather than an autonomous agent framework. Threats are minimal due to the lack of tool execution or complex planning capabilities.
Not certain from the listing — likely hosted on standard cloud infrastructure. Standard web vulnerabilities (OWASP Top 10) like broken authentication or SQL injection are the primary threats to the hosting environment.
Not certain from the listing — likely relies on basic application logging and LLM provider monitoring. There is no evidence of advanced LLM-specific guardrails or real-time drift detection for creative writing outputs.
Not certain from the listing — no security certifications (like SOC2 or ISO 27001) or compliance frameworks are mentioned. Standard user authentication and basic privacy policies are expected for a subscription-based SaaS.
Storyha operates as a standalone creative writing assistant with no integration into a multi-agent ecosystem or marketplace, making ecosystem-level threats (like cascading agent failures or rogue agent interactions) non-existent.
MAESTRO — the 7-layer agentic threat-modeling framework (Cloud Security Alliance / Ken Huang).