優先 そして Mytrasys have introduced Omakase AI Guard, a new service that helps businesses securely publish and operate applications built with generative AI and AI-assisted development tools. The offering mixes AI with security assessments to tackle a challenge that seems to be getting bigger, as more organizations generate software without any real dedicated cybersecurity knowledge or staffing.
In other words, it does more than just point out vulnerabilities. It also performs package checks, risk evaluations, remediation direction, and even helps with deployment and day to day operations. You can upload application files, and then the system scans through the source code, verifies known vulnerabilities, and reviews the overall risks against recognized security norms like the OWASP Top 10. On top of that, it sorts and emphasizes issues that are actually being exploited in the wild by cross checking with CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog.
To make security findings a bit easier to understand, Omakase AI Guard generates reports in Japanese that lay out risks, response priorities and recommended fixes, without leaning too much on technical language. The whole idea is for business teams to be able to make better decisions even when they do not have in-house IT or security specialists on hand.
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The companies say this launch helps solve a familiar problem for organizations that use generative AI for software creation. Even though the AI side can make building applications much quicker, a lot of projects end up stalling before release because businesses are not sure whether the software is secure enough for use in production. By pairing security diagnostics with practical advice and day to day operational support, Omakase AI Guard is meant to help small and medium sized companies ship AI-built applications into production with more confidence.


