Den — agentic threat model
Den presents a high agentic risk profile due to its role as a unified workspace combining chats, documents, and multi-agent workflows. A compromise could allow unauthorized access to sensitive organizational knowledge and the execution of malicious actions via integrated third-party tools.
OWASP AIVSS score rationale
| Autonomy of Action | 0.60 | |
| Goal-Driven Planning | 0.50 | |
| Self-Modification | 0.20 | |
| Dynamic Tool Use | 0.70 | |
| Persistent Memory | 0.80 | |
| Contextual Awareness | 0.80 | |
| Dynamic Identity | 0.40 | |
| Multi-Agent Interactions | 0.70 | |
| Non-Determinism | 0.60 | |
| Opacity & Reflexivity | 0.50 |
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 — Den is closed-source and does not specify its underlying foundation models. Threats include adversarial prompt injection via shared documents or chats, and misaligned outputs.
Den acts as a central repository for chats, documents, and knowledge management. This creates a high risk of data/knowledge-base poisoning (e.g., uploading malicious files to manipulate the AI) and unauthorized data exfiltration of sensitive workspace information.
The platform orchestrates automated workflows and task management. Vulnerabilities here include tool misuse (unauthorized execution of integrated platform actions) and memory poisoning across shared workspace sessions.
Not certain from the listing — No details are provided regarding hosting, sandboxing of agent workflows, or secrets management for third-party integrations. Threats include privilege escalation and lateral movement if workflow execution environments are not isolated.
Not certain from the listing — There is no mention of evaluation frameworks, guardrails, or logging/monitoring capabilities to detect anomalous agent behavior or prompt injection attempts within the workspace.
Not certain from the listing — While designed to replace enterprise tools like Slack and Notion, the listing does not detail identity and access management (IAM), role-based access controls (RBAC), or compliance certifications (e.g., SOC2).
Den explicitly supports multiple AI agents within a single workspace. This introduces risks of agent-to-agent (A2A) trust abuse, cascading failures across automated workflows, and rogue agents executing unauthorized actions on behalf of users.
MAESTRO — the 7-layer agentic threat-modeling framework (Cloud Security Alliance / Ken Huang).