Intruderrorry 〈VALIDATED — Collection〉
Abstract An emergent threat vector—here labeled "intruderrorry"—describes incidents where unauthorized intrusion, human/system error, and adversarial deception converge to produce high-impact breaches or system failures. This paper characterizes intruderrorry, maps attack vectors, analyzes real-world analogues, outlines detection and mitigation strategies, and proposes organizational practices to reduce risk.
A SOC team is overwhelmed by a high volume of false positive alerts. An analyst, whose working memory is overloaded and suffering from proactive interference (where prior noise interferes with new signal), receives an alert for a legitimate but subtle data exfiltration attempt. Because it looks similar to the hundreds of previous false alarms, their cognitive processes "intrude" the pattern of a false positive onto this new event. They dismiss it. The Intruderrorry is the event of the analyst's brain incorrectly classifying a true threat as benign, creating a human-driven false negative. intruderrorry
Human review: security + dev leads audit the artifact and the implicated dependency. An analyst, whose working memory is overloaded and
An attacker breaches a system, but instead of taking data, they introduce subtle, chaotic code—a "logic bomb" or a manipulated AI agent—that causes the system to experience cascading errors, creating a "thrilling" or chaotic, yet unpredictable, performance within the infrastructure. It is the art of breaking things in unexpected ways. Why "Intruderrorry" Matters Now The Intruderrorry is the event of the analyst's
Intruders in network security are people who break into computer systems without permission. They try to steal data, damage files, DigitDefence
Several factors contribute to intruder error, including: