AI Research
Pangea Launches New Research Division and Red Teaming Services to Combat Growing AI Security Attacks
New offerings led by champion AI ethical hacker include specialized security assessments and industry’s most comprehensive AI Attack Taxonomy
PALO ALTO, Calif., July 15, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Pangea, a leading provider of AI security guardrails, today announced the launch of Pangea Labs, a dedicated research division, and specialized Red Teaming services to help organizations defend against sophisticated AI attacks. The dual launch includes the debut of the industry’s most comprehensive AI Prompt Injection Attack Taxonomy—a living framework that maps prompt injection methods and countermeasures developed by the new research team.
Introducing Pangea’s AI Research Division, Pangea Labs
Under the guidance of Chief Product Officer Rob Truesdell, Pangea Labs will research emerging AI attack techniques and conduct red team exercises to identify vulnerabilities in AI systems before malicious actors can exploit them. The division will translate cutting-edge research, such as Pangea’s Prompt Injection Challenge research report, into actionable security enhancements and services. The team’s focus areas include:
- Advanced prompt injection techniques and countermeasures
- AI model manipulation and jailbreaking methods
- Enterprise AI security best practices
- Emerging threat intelligence and attack pattern analysis
Joining Pangea Labs as the first AI Red Team Specialist is Joey Melo, an ethical hacker and professional penetration tester who distinguished himself as the only contestant to successfully escape all three virtual rooms in Pangea’s 2025 Prompt Injection Challenge. Melo holds multiple offensive security certifications including BSCP, OSCP, and OSCE3, and recently achieved 100% completion in the HackAPrompt 2.0 competition, successfully jailbreaking all 39 AI security challenges across multiple models.
Melo joins Dr. Jim Hoagland, whose years-long foundational research has been instrumental in developing Pangea’s comprehensive understanding of AI attack vectors.
Pangea Red Teaming Services Now Available
Building on the expertise of Pangea Labs, Pangea now offers specialized AI Red Teaming services that go beyond traditional penetration testing. These comprehensive security assessments simulate malicious cyberattacks specifically targeting AI systems, helping organizations identify vulnerabilities, assess the effectiveness of security controls, and improve incident response capabilities.
Unlike standard security testing, Pangea’s Red Teaming offering employs a broader scope, mimicking real-world attack scenarios and adversary tactics that specifically target AI implementations. The services leverage the research-backed methodologies developed by Dr. Hoagland and the practical attack expertise demonstrated by Melo, providing organizations with comprehensive visibility into their AI security posture, using the most current threat intelligence available.
“As generative AI becomes deeply embedded in enterprise workflows, the attack surface is expanding exponentially,” said Oliver Friedrichs, Founder and CEO of Pangea. “The launch of Pangea Labs alongside our Red Teaming services represents our commitment to staying ahead of these threats through rigorous research and real-world attack simulation. Our research team’s proven ability to think like an attacker—combined with our platform’s defensive capabilities—creates an unmatched advantage for our customers’ security postures.”
New AI Attack Taxonomy
Pangea’s newly published AI Prompt Injection Attack Taxonomy represents the most up-to-date classification system available, providing security teams with a comprehensive roadmap of attack vectors and defensive strategies. Built on Dr. Hoagland’s extensive research foundation and enhanced by Joey Melo’s practical attack expertise, this living framework will be continuously updated as new threats emerge, ensuring organizations stay ahead of evolving AI security risks.
“Traditional security frameworks weren’t designed for the unique challenges of AI systems,” said Rob Truesdell, Pangea’s Chief Product Officer. “Our taxonomy provides teams with the structured knowledge they need to identify vulnerabilities before attackers do. By understanding the full spectrum of AI attack methods, development teams can build more resilient systems from the ground up.”
Pangea was recently recognized by 150+ CISOs as a top cybersecurity startup and already provides the industry’s most comprehensive protection against AI attacks, helping organizations implement robust security controls across their AI implementations.
For more information, visit pangea.cloud.
About Pangea
Pangea’s AI Guardrail Platform empowers security teams to ship secure AI applications quickly and protect workforce AI use with the industry’s most comprehensive set of AI guardrails, easily deployed via gateways or into applications with just a few lines of code. Pangea stops LLM security threats ranging from prompt injection to sensitive data leakage, covering 8 out of 10 OWASP Top Ten Risks for LLM apps, while accelerating engineering velocity and unlocking AI runtime visibility and control for security teams.
Media Contact: Growth Stack Media | 415-574-0738 | [email protected]
SOURCE Pangea Cyber
AI Research
‘AI Learning Day’ spotlights smart campus and ecosystem co-creation

When artificial intelligence (AI) can help you retrieve literature, support your research, and even act as a “super assistant”, university education is undergoing a profound transformation.
On 9 September, XJTLU’s Centre for Knowledge and Information (CKI) hosted its third AI Learning Day, themed “AI-Empowered, Ecosystem-Co-created”. The event showcased the latest milestones of the University’s “Education + AI” strategy and offered in-depth discussions on the role of AI in higher education.
In her opening remarks, Professor Qiuling Chao, Vice President of XJTLU, said: “AI offers us an opportunity to rethink education, helping us create a learning environment that is fairer, more efficient and more personalised. I hope today’s event will inspire everyone to explore how AI technologies can be applied in your own practice.”
Professor Qiuling Chao
In his keynote speech, Professor Youmin Xi, Executive President of XJTLU, elaborated on the University’s vision for future universities. He stressed that future universities would evolve into human-AI symbiotic ecosystems, where learning would be centred on project-based co-creation and human-AI collaboration. The role of educators, he noted, would shift from transmitters of knowledge to mentors for both learning and life.
Professor Youmin Xi
At the event, Professor Xi’s digital twin, created by the XJTLU Virtual Engineering Centre in collaboration with the team led by Qilei Sun from the Academy of Artificial Intelligence, delivered Teachers’ Day greetings to all staff.
(Teachers’ Day message from President Xi’s digital twin)
“Education + AI” in diverse scenarios
This event also highlighted four case studies from different areas of the University. Dr Ling Xia from the Global Cultures and Languages Hub suggested that in the AI era, curricula should undergo de-skilling (assigning repetitive tasks to AI), re-skilling, and up-skilling, thereby enabling students to focus on in-depth learning in critical thinking and research methodologies.
Dr Xiangyun Lu from International Business School Suzhou (IBSS) demonstrated how AI teaching assistants and the University’s Junmou AI platform can offer students a customised and highly interactive learning experience, particularly for those facing challenges such as information overload and language barriers.
Dr Juan Li from the School of Science shared the concept of the “AI amplifier” for research. She explained that the “double amplifier” effect works in two stages: AI first amplifies students’ efficiency by automating tasks like literature searches and coding. These empowered students then become the second amplifier, freeing mentors from routine work so they can focus on high-level strategy. This human-AI partnership allows a small research team to achieve the output of a much larger one.
Jing Wang, Deputy Director of the XJTLU Learning Mall, showed how AI agents are already being used to support scheduling, meeting bookings, news updates and other administrative and learning tasks. She also announced that from this semester, all students would have access to the XIPU AI Agent platform.
Students and teachers are having a discussion at one of the booths
AI education system co-created by staff and students
The event’s AI interactive zone also drew significant attention from students and staff. From the Junmou AI platform to the E
-Support chatbot, and from AI-assisted creative design to 3D printing, 10 exhibition booths demonstrated the integration of AI across campus life.
These innovative applications sparked lively discussions and thoughtful reflections among participants. In an interview, Thomas Durham from IBSS noted that, although he had rarely used AI before, the event was highly inspiring and motivated him to explore its use in both professional and personal life. He also shared his perspective on AI’s role in learning, stating: “My expectation for the future of AI in education is that it should help students think critically. My worry is that AI’s convenience and efficiency might make students’ understanding too superficial, since AI does much of the hard work for them. Hopefully, critical thinking will still be preserved.”
Year One student Zifei Xu was particularly inspired by the interdisciplinary collaboration on display at the event, remarking that it offered her a glimpse of a more holistic and future-focused education.
Dr Xin Bi, XJTLU’s Chief Officer of Data and Director of the CKI, noted that, supported by robust digital infrastructure such as the Junmou AI platform, more than 26,000 students and 2,400 staff are already using the University’s AI platforms. XJTLU’s digital transformation is advancing from informatisation and digitisation towards intelligentisation, with AI expected to empower teaching, research and administration, and to help staff and students leap from knowledge to wisdom.
Dr Xin Bi
“Looking ahead, we will continue to advance the deep integration of AI in education, research, administration and services, building a data-driven intelligent operations centre and fostering a sustainable AI learning ecosystem,” said Dr Xin Bi.
By Qinru Liu
Edited by Patricia Pieterse
Translated by Xiangyin Han
AI Research
Vietnam plans to introduce Law on Artificial Intelligence

This information was announced by Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Manh Hung at a conference organised by the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics in coordination with the Ministry of Public Security, the Ministry of National Defense, and the Central Theoretical Council in Hanoi on September 15.
Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Manh Hung. Photo: MST |
At the event, experts, businesses, and managers shared their ideas in two discussion sessions. The first session focused on AI power, risks and control, analysing both positive and negative aspects, affirming the need to exploit potential and control ethics, safety, security, and social risks.
In the second session, they discussed national AI development strategy, from vision to actions, a specific roadmap to make AI a pillar in Vietnam’s socioeconomic development.
They agreed that for AI to truly become a driving force for development, Vietnam needs a comprehensive strategy: data infrastructure, high-quality human resources, a complete legal framework, and a dynamic innovation ecosystem. More importantly, AI must be oriented to serve people, protect human rights, and strengthen national security in the digital age.
According to Minister Hung, Vietnam issued its first AI Strategy in 2021, but AI is a rapidly changing field, so the strategy needed to be updated.
By the end of this year, the country will have an updated version of the National AI Strategy and the AI Law. This is not only a legal framework, but also a declaration of national vision. AI must become the country’s intellectual infrastructure, serving the people, developing sustainably, and enhancing national competitiveness.
Regarding open AI technology, Hung emphasised that Vietnam is committed to developing and mastering digital technology, including AI, based on open standards and open-source code. This is also Vietnam’s strategy to develop and master Vietnamese technology, implementing the “Make in Vietnam” programme.
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Experts, businesses, and managers share their ideas at the conference. Photo: MST |
Regarding creating a domestic AI market, he said that without applications, there will be no market. Without a market, Vietnamese AI enterprises will remain small. Therefore, promoting AI applications in enterprises, in state agencies and key areas is the fastest way to develop AI and create Vietnamese AI enterprises.
“The government will spend more on AI, the Natif Technology Innovation Fund of the Ministry of Science and Technology will spend at least 40 per cent to support AI applications, issue vouchers for small and medium-sized enterprises using Vietnamese AI. The domestic market is the cradle to create Vietnamese AI enterprises,” he noted.
In terms of policy and institutions, he added that Vietnam will issue a national AI ethics code that is in line with international standards but suitable for Vietnamese practice, and at the same time develop an AI Law and an AI strategy with core principles including risk-based management, transparency and accountability, putting people at the center, encouraging domestic AI development, AI autonomy, using AI as a driving force for rapid and sustainable growth, and protecting digital sovereignty based on three pillars: data, infrastructure, and AI technology.
According to the MST, Vietnam’s AI development will have to be based on four important pillars: transparent institutions, modern infrastructure, high-quality human resources, and humane culture.
Time for Vietnam to make breakthroughs
Speaking at the workshop, Luong Tam Quang, Minister of Public Security, said that AI is considered one of the key technologies, a factor that can lead to changes in the global order.
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Luong Tam Quang, Minister of Public Security. Photo: MST |
He added that with the ability to promote economic growth, optimise production, improve healthcare, innovate education, and enhance social governance capacity, AI helps countries save costs, increase efficiency, and expand knowledge. It is also a resource, and a driving force to affirm the country’s position in the digital age.
According to Minister Quang, Vietnam’s potential for AI development is huge, and is expected to contribute about $79.3 billion, equivalent to 12 per cent of Vietnam’s GDP in 2030 if widely applied. Under the leadership of the Party, legal regulations for the development of AI have gradually taken shape.
Prof. Dr. Nguyen Xuan Thang, director of the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, and chairman of the Central Theoretical Council, said that AI is becoming an indispensable part in the process of establishing a new growth model and the operation, governance, and management of the country’s society and economy.
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Prof. Dr. Nguyen Xuan Thang, director of the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, and chairman of the Central Theoretical Council. Photo: MST |
However, to turn potential into reality, it requires the support of the entire ecosystem, from national strategies and policies to implementation in businesses, institutes, schools, and the community.
“AI cannot develop sustainably without responsibility, ethics, and a clear humanistic orientation. Technology is the tool, while humans are the goal and the deciding factor, because even if it possesses unlimited power as many people believe, AI is still a product created by humans,” Thang emphasised.
![]() |
FPT University and Dream Lab harness AI to cultivate startups
FPT University and Dream Lab on July 31 signed a MoU to launch a groundbreaking initiative aimed at building Vietnam’s most dynamic startup and entrepreneurial ecosystem for students. |
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Citi launches AI tools for employees in Vietnam
Citi has expanded the rollout of its generative AI tools to employees across key Asian markets, marking a significant step towards enhancing productivity and innovation. |
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AI boom drives data center surge in Southeast Asia
AI is fueling an unprecedented surge in data center demand that Southeast Asia is not yet ready to meet. |
AI Research
Philippine businesses slow to adopt AI, study finds – People Matters Global

Philippine businesses slow to adopt AI, study finds People Matters Global
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