@orion-blakesecurity-risk-automation-playbookTextePublicMis à jour le 14 juin 2026

Security Risk prompt that maps a manual workflow into safe tool-assisted automation and returns workflow map, tool schema, approval gates, and rollback plan.

72Stars0Fork96Copies

Prompt

Apercu

Artefacts

1 artefacts

Example Output: Security Risk Tool Automation Playbook

Inputs used

  • Project context: an internal agent that can read tickets, GitHub issues, and customer documents
  • Target audience: security engineers, platform owners, privacy teams
  • Success metric: activation, quality, and risk reduction
  • Available tools and data: threat model template, SIEM, secret scanner, policy engine
  • Desired depth: Production-ready
  • Output tone: Clear operator memo

Generated Result

workflow map, tool schema, approval gates, and rollback plan

Current workflow

Start with the manual path that uses data flow diagrams. Automate the read/summarize/draft steps first; keep approval, notification, and destructive writes outside the first release.

Automation candidates

Start with the manual path that uses tool permissions. Automate the read/summarize/draft steps first; keep approval, notification, and destructive writes outside the first release.

Tool interfaces

Use secret scanner as the primary working surface. Read actions are allowed by default; write actions require an explicit human approval step and an audit entry containing source, reviewer, and rollback path.

Approval gates

Use security incidents as evidence, apply the constraint "prioritize exploitability", and explicitly note how the plan reduces unreviewed tool writes. The output should be ready for a practitioner to act on without a follow-up explanation.

Failure recovery

Use data flow diagrams as evidence, apply the constraint "map each risk to a control", and explicitly note how the plan reduces prompt injection. The output should be ready for a practitioner to act on without a follow-up explanation.

Implementation slices

Use tool permissions as evidence, apply the constraint "respect privacy boundaries", and explicitly note how the plan reduces credential leakage. The output should be ready for a practitioner to act on without a follow-up explanation.

Recommended Decision

Proceed with a narrow pilot focused on data flow diagrams and tool permissions. Treat prompt injection as the primary launch blocker. The first milestone should prove that the workflow produces a usable risk register, mitigations, and verification checklist with clear evidence, named owners, and a review path for ambiguous cases.

Expected quality checks

  • The result is specific to AI system threat modeling, prompt-injection review, data exposure risk, and incident readiness.
  • It includes the required sections: Current workflow, Automation candidates, Tool interfaces, Approval gates, Failure recovery, Implementation slices.
  • It separates evidence, assumptions, risks, and recommended next actions.
  • It includes practical verification steps, not only generic advice.
  • It names the most important failure mode for this domain: prompt injection.

Reuse note

Before copying the output into production work, replace all default variables with your real data and run a human review for high-impact decisions.

README

README.md

Security Risk: Tool Automation Playbook

Use this prompt when you need workflow map, tool schema, approval gates, and rollback plan for AI system threat modeling, prompt-injection review, data exposure risk, and incident readiness.

Best for

  • security engineers, platform owners, privacy teams
  • Teams that already have partial context but need a sharper, reusable artifact
  • AI workflows where the output must be auditable, editable, and easy to hand off

How to use

  1. Replace the variables in the prompt with your real project context.
  2. Keep the default constraints unless your team has stronger internal rules.
  3. Review the generated output against the checklist in the example artifact.

Design notes

This seed follows current prompting practice: explicit role, structured inputs, domain evidence, operational guardrails, and a concrete output contract. It is written in English for international PromptHub users.