📊 Full opportunity report: The OAuth Permission Apocalypse. on ThorstenMeyerAI.com — validation score, market gap, and execution plan.

TL;DR

The widespread use of permissive OAuth permissions, especially ‘Allow All’ consent, has created a major security vulnerability in enterprise environments. Recent breaches, including Vercel, highlight the systemic risk. Industry needs structural fixes to prevent future attacks.

Security researchers have identified a critical vulnerability in how enterprises deploy OAuth permissions, exemplified by the recent Vercel breach where broad ‘Allow All’ permissions enabled attackers to exfiltrate sensitive data. This structural flaw, not a protocol defect, has made OAuth the dominant attack surface of 2026, with implications for hundreds of organizations.

The recent Vercel incident involved an employee granting a third-party AI tool, Context.ai, broad access via ‘Allow All’ permissions in Google Workspace. When the OAuth tokens were stolen, the attacker inherited full access to the employee’s Google Drive, Gmail, and other services, leading to a $2 million breach. This pattern reflects a systemic deployment failure where enterprise defaults favor permissiveness over security.

Industry analysis indicates that most OAuth integrations request broad scopes because granular permissions are complex to implement. Additionally, user consent flows often default to ‘Allow All,’ and administrators rarely audit existing permissions, creating a large attack surface. Shadow AI tools, which require extensive data access, further amplify this risk, especially as enterprises connect 50+ third-party apps per user.

The OAuth Permission Apocalypse.
DISPATCH / MAY 2026 SECURITY · OAUTH APOCALYPSE · “ALLOW ALL” · PART 4
▲ Part 4 · Security OAuth Apocalypse · May 2026
Software Security · Part 4 · The OAuth Permission Apocalypse

The OAuth permission
apocalypse.

“Allow All” is the new SQL injection. Shadow AI is the multiplier turning a known structural risk into the most consequential attack surface of 2026.

OAuth as a protocol is fine. OAuth as deployed across enterprise productivity stacks is structurally broken. The “Allow All” consent pattern has the same anatomy that made SQL injection OWASP #1 from 2003-2017 — well-known risk, ubiquitous deployment, slow remediation. Average enterprise user connects 50+ third-party apps to corporate identity. One click. One token theft. 700+ organizations.

▲ The central editorial finding
OAuth as a protocol is fine. OAuth as deployed is structurally broken. Same anatomy as SQL injection. Same multi-year dominance ahead unless platform defaults change.
— software security · the OAuth permission apocalypse · part 4 · may 2026
700+
Orgs hit by Drift/Salesloft OAuth supply chain · Aug 2025
UNC6395 · 1.5B records · 70+ lawsuits · FBI CSA-2025-250912
50+
Third-party apps connected per enterprise user · 2026
CrowdStrike · Reco AI · Vectra · the attack surface
37x
YoY increase · device code phishing attacks
OAuth-equivalent of phishing · 12+ PhaaS kits in circulation
14yrs
SQL injection at OWASP #1 · 2003-2017
Historical baseline · OAuth on year 3-4 of dominance
DRIFT / SALESLOFT AUG 2025 · UNC6395 · 700+ ORGS · 1.5B RECORDS · CLOUDFLARE GOOGLE PAGERDUTY PALO ALTO PROOFPOINT VERCEL / CONTEXT.AI APR 19 2026 · LUMMA STEALER → OAUTH → WORKSPACE → ENV VARS → $2M BREACHFORUMS LITELLM PYPI MAR 24 2026 · TEAMPCP / UNC6780 · 3.4M DAILY DOWNLOADS · SANDCLOCK STEALER SHADOW AI 98% UNSANCTIONED · 49% EXPECT INCIDENTS · $670K BREACH PREMIUM · 247-DAY DETECTION GARTNER 40% ENTERPRISE APPS WITH AI AGENTS BY END 2026 · UP FROM <5% IN 2025 · 8X IN 18 MONTHS GRANULAR CONSENT GOOGLE WORKSPACE JAN 7 + JAN 20 2026 · BUT: NEW GRANTS ONLY · DEVELOPER OPT-IN · NO ADMIN CONTROL DRIFT / SALESLOFT AUG 2025 · UNC6395 · 700+ ORGS · 1.5B RECORDS · 70+ LAWSUITS
The structural argument · why this analogy is anatomical, not rhetorical

SQL injection sat at OWASP #1 for 14 years. Same structural anatomy.

Both vulnerabilities have a protocol that’s fine in isolation and a deployment pattern that favors exploitability. Both have well-known mitigations. Both persist because deployment patterns spread faster than remediation. OAuth permission abuse is on year 3-4 of its dominance.

SQL injection vs OAuth “Allow All” · 5-point structural mapping
Same anatomy. Same default-deployment-favors-exploitability dynamic. Same industry-wide pattern failure. Different attack layer.
▲ 2003-2017 · 14 years dominant
SQL injection · OWASP #1
14,000+ CVEs in 2025. Dropped to A05. Still pervasive.
▲ 2023-2026+ · year 3-4
OAuth “Allow All” · the apocalypse
50+ apps per user. 700-org cascade events. Accelerating.
▲ ANATOMY 01 · PROTOCOL FINE · DEPLOYMENT BROKENThe vulnerability is in composition, not the protocol
SQL itself isn’t vulnerable. Vulnerability arises from how applications compose queries with untrusted user input.
OAuth itself isn’t vulnerable. RFC 6749 is fine. Vulnerability arises from how applications and enterprise environments compose permission grants.
▲ ANATOMY 02 · DEFAULTS FAVOR EXPLOITABILITYThe easy path is the unsafe path
String concatenation was the easiest way to write database access for two decades. Parameterized queries required more code.
Broad scopes are the path of least resistance. “Allow All” is a single button. Admin-managed consent is opt-in for admins, not default.
▲ ANATOMY 03 · DISTRIBUTED SURFACEEvery instance is a potential exposure
Every database-backed web app a potential exposure. Fix had to happen at every individual application.
Every third-party SaaS integration a potential exposure. Each employee can authorize new integrations independently.
▲ ANATOMY 04 · ASYMMETRIC REMEDIATION COSTDiscovery is fast, audit is slow
Bug introduced in minutes. Auditing entire codebase for similar patterns took weeks to months.
OAuth grant takes seconds. Auditing all grants across 10,000-employee enterprise takes weeks. Most never have.
▲ ANATOMY 05 · INDUSTRY-WIDE PATTERN FAILUREThe whole ecosystem reinforced the bad pattern
Tutorials, framework examples, educational materials all reinforced vulnerable pattern. Correction took years to propagate.
AI tool onboarding flows actively encourage broad permission grants. Scope minimization education sparse across the ecosystem.

14 years of SQL injection at OWASP #1 is the historical baseline. OAuth permission abuse is on year 3-4 of dominance. Without structural intervention, expect another decade as the dominant supply-chain attack vector.

The 2025-2026 cascade · empirical evidence
Meteor in Action

Meteor in Action

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Same pattern. Different vendors. Recurring.

Drift/Salesloft was the precedent. Vercel was the recapitulation. LiteLLM was the parallel. The structural pattern — OAuth supply chain compromise leveraging “Allow All” permission grants — produces breach after breach across vendors and attack methods.

The 2025-2026 OAuth supply chain timeline
Same pattern repeating across vendors. Each instance produces 100s-1000s of victim organizations through OAuth token cascade.
Aug 2025UNC6395
Drift / Salesloft · OAuth supply chain · Salesforce
Salesloft GitHub compromised Mar-Jun 2025. Drift’s Salesforce OAuth tokens extracted. Mass SOQL queries Aug 9-17 across 700+ Salesforce orgs. Verified victims: Cloudflare, Google, PagerDuty, Palo Alto Networks, Proofpoint, SpyCloud, Tanium, Zscaler.
700orgs · 1.5B records · 70+ lawsuits
Apr 19 2026ShinyHunters
Vercel / Context.ai · OAuth supply chain · Workspace
Lumma Stealer infected Context.ai employee Feb 2026. Google Workspace OAuth tokens harvested. Vercel employee had granted Context.ai “Allow All” enterprise permissions. Pivoted to Vercel account → env variables → BreachForums.
$2MBreachForums asking price
Mar 24 2026TeamPCP / UNC6780
LiteLLM PyPI · supply chain · LLM proxy
Trivy CI/CD publishing credentials stolen → malicious LiteLLM versions 1.82.7/1.82.8 published. SANDCLOCK credential stealer embedded. AWS keys + GitHub tokens extracted. Plus Checkmarx + BerriAI GitHub compromises in same campaign.
3.4Mdaily downloads · LLM proxy ubiquity
Ongoing2026+
Continuing cascade · same pattern, new vendors
Several Salesforce-adjacent OAuth supply chain campaigns continuing through 2026. ShinyHunters operating against same attack pattern with new compromised vendors. Some fraction of the 50+ AI tools your employees have connected will be compromised in 2026-2027.
nextalready being staged
▲ The structural pattern · every instance
vendor compromise OAuth token theft “Allow All” permission inheritance enterprise data cascade sale / extortion
Shadow AI · the consequence multiplier
Cloud Native Data Security with OAuth: A Scalable Zero Trust Architecture

Cloud Native Data Security with OAuth: A Scalable Zero Trust Architecture

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Shadow AI is not shadow IT. Three structural differences make it worse.

Shadow IT has been a known governance problem for two decades. Shadow AI is categorically different in three ways that turn a manageable problem into the dominant supply-chain attack pattern.

Shadow AI · three structural differences from shadow IT
Each difference is consequential individually. Together they produce a structurally larger attack surface than any prior governance category.
01By design
AI tools require broad permissions by design
AI schedulers need calendar + email + contacts. AI writing assistants need documents + email history. AI meeting summarizers need recordings + transcripts. The breadth of permission is not a configuration mistake — it’s a fundamental requirement of the AI productivity tool category.
50+apps per user · breadth required by design
02Proliferation
Proliferation rate is exponential
<5% of enterprise applications featured AI agents in 2025 (Gartner). Projected 40% by end 2026. 8x increase in 18 months. The attack surface grows faster than security visibility, faster than governance can adapt, faster than policy can be applied.
8xin 18 months · AI agent proliferation rate
03Attack infra
Tools become attack infrastructure
Once obtained, OAuth tokens bypass MFA entirely, persist across credential changes, look identical to legitimate use, and scale with permission breadth. Compromised AI productivity tools become persistent, MFA-bypass-equipped, logging-invisible access channels.
247days · avg shadow AI breach detection · vs 241
Platform response · what shipped vs what’s missing
Cloud Native Data Security with OAuth: A Scalable Zero Trust Architecture

Cloud Native Data Security with OAuth: A Scalable Zero Trust Architecture

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The platforms are responding. Incrementally.

Google and Microsoft both shipped meaningful improvements in 2026. But the default deployment behavior remains permissive. Until platform defaults change, individual employees can grant enterprise-wide access without admin review.

Platform response · capability shipped vs structural gap remaining
The technical capability exists. The default behavior does not enforce it. This is the binding gap.
▲ SHIPPED · Q1-Q2 2026
Real but incremental capability
  • Google granular OAuth consent · web apps Jan 7 · Chat apps Jan 20 · checkbox scopes
  • Microsoft Agent 365 GA May 1 · Shadow AI page · prompt injection blocking · Entra controls extended to Copilot Studio
  • Okta adaptive MFA for OAuth grants · centralized OAuth grant management
  • ITDR vendor maturation · Push Security, Permiso, Reco AI, Obsidian, AppOmni, Nudge Security, Adaptive Shield
  • Google Admin API controls · Trusted/Limited/Specific/Blocked categories
▲ STILL MISSING · STRUCTURAL
The binding gap remains
  • Default platform behavior favors permissiveness. Google Workspace + M365 still ship with user-level OAuth consent enabled by default
  • Granular consent applies only to new grants. Pre-existing grants unaffected
  • Developer opt-in required. Many apps don’t yet support granular consent
  • No automatic scope minimization for AI tools at platform layer
  • No OAuth token rotation enforcement · tokens valid indefinitely
  • No default audit logging surfaced in security dashboards
  • No periodic re-consent requirement · forgotten grants persist

“Most Google Workspace and Microsoft 365 environments are still configured to let any employee grant third-party apps access to their enterprise account. Move to admin-managed consent. New apps get reviewed before they can touch corporate data. That one change would have blocked a Vercel employee from granting Context.ai enterprise-wide scopes in the first place.”

— Jaime Blasco · CTO · Nudge Security · Dark Reading post-Vercel
Operational priorities · what enterprise security can do now
Amazon

third-party app permission audit tools

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Six priorities. Highest-leverage first.

Don’t wait for platform defaults to change. The single highest-leverage configuration change is admin-managed consent. Each enterprise that switches removes their employees from being the next Vercel-style entry vector.

Six enterprise priorities · by structural leverage
The single highest-leverage configuration change is #2 admin-managed consent. Most enterprises have not made it.
01inventory
Inventory what’s already connected.
Most enterprises have no inventory of OAuth grants. Prerequisite for everything else. Google Admin → API controls. M365 Entra → Enterprise applications. Okta → App Catalog. Salesforce → Connected Apps. Most enterprises discover dozens to hundreds of forgotten grants.
PREREQUISITE
02highest leverage
Switch to admin-managed consent.
The single highest-leverage configuration change. Move from “users can grant” to “users request, admins approve.” This single change blocks the Vercel attack chain from being possible. Configure in Google Admin · Entra · Okta · Salesforce Connected Apps.
★ HIGHEST
LEVERAGE
03monitor
Implement OAuth-specific monitoring.
Anomaly detection on OAuth grants · token usage monitoring · automated revocation workflows · grant inventory dashboards. Nudge / Push Security $10-30/employee/mo. SSPM platforms (Reco, AppOmni, Obsidian, Adaptive Shield) $50-200/employee/mo. Pick based on existing security tool integration.
VENDOR
SELECTION
04audit
High-risk OAuth scope audit.
Specific scopes deserve individual review: gmail.readonly · gmail.send · drive · calendar + contacts · Salesforce api · Slack users:read.email + channels · GitHub repo · cloud broad-scope service accounts. Each represents a potential Drift-style or Vercel-style blast radius.
SCOPE
REVIEW
05train
Train workforce on shadow AI risk.
The training is not technical — it is risk awareness. Every employee should understand that clicking “Allow” on an OAuth consent screen for an AI productivity tool grants enterprise data access · the vendor’s security becomes organizational risk · “trying it just for productivity” is a security event, not a productivity event.
RISK
AWARENESS
06plan
Plan for the next instance.
Drift and Vercel are not the last. Build IR playbooks specifically for OAuth-supply-chain compromise scenarios. What’s the response if a vendor announces token theft? Who decides immediate revocation vs scope assessment? Most enterprises have not war-gamed these scenarios.
IR
PLAYBOOKS

OAuth as a protocol is fine. OAuth as deployed is structurally broken. Same anatomy as SQL injection. Same multi-year dominance ahead unless platform defaults change. One configuration change blocks the entire Vercel attack chain.

— Software security · the OAuth permission apocalypse · Part 4 · May 2026
Source dossier · the receipts
  • 732 Bytes to Root · the cost-curve collapse · Part 1
  • The 90-Day Window Closed · the disclosure collapse · Part 2
  • The Defender’s Counter-Cascade · the deployment gap · Part 3
  • The Hacker News · Salesloft Takes Drift Offline After OAuth Token Theft Hits Hundreds of Organizations · Sep 2025
  • Google GTIG · UNC6395 / GRUB1 attribution for Drift/Salesloft
  • FBI Cybersecurity Advisory CSA-2025-250912 · Salesforce SaaS integration targeting
  • Anomali · Reviewing the Salesforce–Salesloft Drift OAuth Supply Chain Breach · Dec 2025
  • AppOmni · Salesloft Drift–Salesforce Breach (UNC6395)
  • CSO Online · Salesforce’s glaring Dreamforce omission · 1.5B records · 70+ lawsuits
  • BleepingComputer · Learning from the Vercel breach: Shadow AI & OAuth sprawl
  • Dark Reading · Jaime Blasco (Nudge Security CTO) post-Vercel commentary
  • CybelAngel · The Vercel Breach Flash Report · Shadow AI framing
  • Trend Micro · The Vercel Breach: OAuth Supply Chain Attack · April 21 2026
  • OX Security · Vercel Breached via Context AI Supply Chain Attack
  • Hudson Rock · Context.ai Lumma Stealer compromise · Feb 2026
  • Reco AI · AI & Cloud Security Breaches: 2025 Year in Review · 97% lacked controls
  • Vectra AI · Shadow AI explained · 98% unsanctioned · 49% expect incidents
  • Gartner · 40% enterprise apps with AI agents by end 2026
  • CrowdStrike 2026 Global Threat Report · 90+ orgs · 550% ChatGPT mention increase
  • Netskope 2026 · 223 AI data policy violations / month / enterprise
  • Google Workspace Updates · Granular OAuth consent rollout · Jan 7 + Jan 20 2026
  • Microsoft Agent 365 GA May 1 2026 · M365 E7 Frontier Suite
  • OWASP Top 10:2021 A03 Injection · OWASP Top 10:2025 A05 Injection · 14K CVEs
  • LiteLLM PyPI · Mar 24 2026 · TeamPCP / UNC6780 · 3.4M daily downloads
  • Chrome Web Store · Context.ai extension removal · Mar 27 2026
  • Nudge Security · Push Security · ITDR / SSPM vendor landscape
Colophon · Part 4

Set in Source Serif 4, IBM Plex Sans, & IBM Plex Mono. Security-advisory aesthetic. Free to embed with attribution.

thorstenmeyerai.com

Software security · the OAuth permission apocalypse · Part 4 of 4 · May 2026

700+ orgs · 50+ apps · 37x · 14 years

Implications of Permissive OAuth Permissions in Enterprise Security

This vulnerability matters because it transforms OAuth from a secure protocol into a major attack vector, enabling supply-chain breaches at scale. The ‘Allow All’ pattern is a known risk, yet industry defaults and developer practices continue to favor permissiveness, making organizations vulnerable to large-scale data exfiltration and supply-chain attacks. The Vercel breach exemplifies how a single misconfiguration can cascade into millions of dollars in damages and legal liabilities.

Historical and Industry Patterns of Structural Security Failures

The analogy with SQL injection is instructive: for over a decade, SQL injection held the top spot in OWASP’s list of web application vulnerabilities, persisting due to widespread deployment of vulnerable patterns and slow remediation. Similarly, OAuth’s ‘Allow All’ permissions are a structural issue rooted in default configurations, developer practices, and ecosystem educational gaps. Past incidents like the 2025 Drift/Salesloft breach set a precedent, with over 700 organizations affected and billions of records compromised.

“Without structural intervention—like granular permissions and default restrictive settings—OAuth will continue to be exploited at scale for years to come.”

— Industry cybersecurity expert

Unresolved Questions About Industry-Wide Fixes

It remains unclear whether major platform providers like Google, Microsoft, and Okta will implement comprehensive default restrictions or if organizations will proactively audit and revoke permissive OAuth grants before the next breach occurs. The pace of industry-wide adoption of best practices is uncertain, and the timeline for effective regulation or standardization remains undefined.

Next Steps for Mitigating OAuth Structural Risks

Industry stakeholders are expected to push for more restrictive default OAuth settings, improved user consent flows, and automated permission auditing tools. Regulatory bodies may consider establishing standards for OAuth permission granularity. Organizations should prioritize auditing existing OAuth permissions and adopting least-privilege principles to reduce exposure. The next major breach could occur if these measures are not implemented promptly.

Key Questions

What is the main security flaw in current OAuth deployment?

The main flaw is the default and widespread use of broad ‘Allow All’ permissions, which grant extensive access with minimal oversight, creating a large attack surface.

How does this compare to SQL injection vulnerabilities?

Both are structural vulnerabilities rooted in deployment patterns—SQL injection persisted because of widespread risky coding practices, and OAuth ‘Allow All’ persists due to default permissive configurations and developer habits.

What can organizations do to protect themselves now?

Organizations should audit existing OAuth permissions, revoke unnecessary broad grants, implement least-privilege policies, and advocate for platform default restrictions.

Will platform providers change default settings?

It is uncertain; industry pressure and regulatory considerations may drive providers to adopt more restrictive defaults, but no firm commitments have been announced yet.

When might we see industry-wide fixes?

Potentially within the next 1-3 years, depending on regulatory action, industry standards, and organizational initiatives, but progress remains uncertain.

Source: ThorstenMeyerAI.com

This content is for general information only and is not financial, tax or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional for decisions about your money.
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