Blackbird.AI Featured in TAG Infosphere’s Enterprise AI Security Handbook

TAG Infosphere's new Enterprise AI Security Handbook gives CISOs a practical framework for enterprise AI security, and Blackbird.AI is featured for its role in detecting AI-driven narrative threats.

TAG Infosphere

Blackbird.AI has been featured in the Enterprise AI Security Handbook, a special edition published by TAG Infosphere. The handbook, led by Dr. Edward Amoroso, CEO of TAG Infosphere and Research Professor at NYU, provides enterprise security teams with a practical guide to managing AI-related risk across their organizations.

As enterprises move from AI experimentation to production deployment, CISOs and security leaders face a growing set of challenges: AI-generated misinformation, deepfake fraud, narrative manipulation, and adversarial attacks targeting AI systems themselves. The TAG handbook addresses these challenges with operational guidance across the full AI security lifecycle, from discovery and governance to runtime protection and security operations integration.

READ: The RAV3N Report: 2026 State of Disinformation Narrative Intelligence

Narrative Intelligence as an AI Security Imperative

Blackbird.AI’s inclusion in the handbook reflects the company’s role in helping organizations detect and respond to AI-driven narrative threats. Traditional cybersecurity tools were designed for network and endpoint protection. They were not built to identify coordinated influence campaigns, synthetic media attacks, or narrative manipulation that targets an organization’s reputation, market position, or stakeholder trust.

Blackbird.AI’s Constellation Platform uses narrative intelligence to give security and communications teams real-time visibility into these threats. The AI-based platform identifies harmful narratives as they emerge, monitors their spread across digital channels, and provides actionable context that helps organizations respond before damage escalates.

Why This Matters for CISOs

AI is reshaping the threat landscape at every level. Adversaries are using generative AI to produce convincing deepfakes, automate social engineering campaigns, and manufacture false narratives at scale. These attacks exploit trust, and they often reach decision-makers and public audiences before traditional security tools can detect them.

The TAG handbook highlights the importance of vendor innovation in addressing this expanding attack surface. For CISOs building AI security programs, narrative intelligence represents a critical capability gap. Threats to an organization’s information environment carry material risk to brand equity, stock price, regulatory standing, and executive safety. Closing that gap requires tools purpose-built for the narrative threat landscape.

A Trusted Resource for Enterprise Security Leaders

TAG Infosphere is one of the most respected independent research and advisory firms in cybersecurity. Dr. Amoroso and his analyst team serve enterprise security teams, vendors, and investors with research designed to cut through market noise and deliver practical, actionable guidance.

The Enterprise AI Security Handbook is available through TAG Infosphere. By spotlighting companies contributing to enterprise AI security, the handbook provides a valuable reference for organizations looking to operationalize their AI risk management strategies.

Blackbird.AI’s recognition in the handbook reinforces the company’s position at the forefront of narrative intelligence and AI security. As AI-powered threats continue to evolve, the need for purpose-built tools that protect organizations from narrative manipulation has never been more urgent.

Request your confidential narrative risk report here.

Dan Patterson

Dan Patterson
Head of Corporate Communications

Dan Patterson is a strategic communications leader driving impact at the intersection of artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and media. At Blackbird.AI, Dan leads communication and content strategy that breaks down complex AI and cybersecurity concepts for diverse business audiences. Prior, he was the national tech correspondent for CBS News.