Text Generation
Transformers
Safetensors
PEFT
English
qwen3
cybersecurity
cti
cwe-classification
vulnerability-analysis
security
lora
amd
rocm
mi300x
flash-attention-2
conversational
Eval Results (legacy)
text-generation-inference
Instructions to use athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B with libraries, inference providers, notebooks, and local apps. Follow these links to get started.
- Libraries
- Transformers
How to use athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B with Transformers:
# Use a pipeline as a high-level helper from transformers import pipeline pipe = pipeline("text-generation", model="athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B") messages = [ {"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"}, ] pipe(messages)# Load model directly from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B") model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained("athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B") messages = [ {"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"}, ] inputs = tokenizer.apply_chat_template( messages, add_generation_prompt=True, tokenize=True, return_dict=True, return_tensors="pt", ).to(model.device) outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=40) print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0][inputs["input_ids"].shape[-1]:])) - PEFT
How to use athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B with PEFT:
Task type is invalid.
- Notebooks
- Google Colab
- Kaggle
- Local Apps
- vLLM
How to use athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B with vLLM:
Install from pip and serve model
# Install vLLM from pip: pip install vllm # Start the vLLM server: vllm serve "athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B" # Call the server using curl (OpenAI-compatible API): curl -X POST "http://localhost:8000/v1/chat/completions" \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ --data '{ "model": "athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B", "messages": [ { "role": "user", "content": "What is the capital of France?" } ] }'Use Docker
docker model run hf.co/athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B
- SGLang
How to use athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B with SGLang:
Install from pip and serve model
# Install SGLang from pip: pip install sglang # Start the SGLang server: python3 -m sglang.launch_server \ --model-path "athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B" \ --host 0.0.0.0 \ --port 30000 # Call the server using curl (OpenAI-compatible API): curl -X POST "http://localhost:30000/v1/chat/completions" \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ --data '{ "model": "athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B", "messages": [ { "role": "user", "content": "What is the capital of France?" } ] }'Use Docker images
docker run --gpus all \ --shm-size 32g \ -p 30000:30000 \ -v ~/.cache/huggingface:/root/.cache/huggingface \ --env "HF_TOKEN=<secret>" \ --ipc=host \ lmsysorg/sglang:latest \ python3 -m sglang.launch_server \ --model-path "athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B" \ --host 0.0.0.0 \ --port 30000 # Call the server using curl (OpenAI-compatible API): curl -X POST "http://localhost:30000/v1/chat/completions" \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ --data '{ "model": "athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B", "messages": [ { "role": "user", "content": "What is the capital of France?" } ] }' - Docker Model Runner
How to use athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B with Docker Model Runner:
docker model run hf.co/athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B
| license: apache-2.0 | |
| library_name: transformers | |
| pipeline_tag: text-generation | |
| base_model: Qwen/Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507 | |
| tags: | |
| - cybersecurity | |
| - cti | |
| - cwe-classification | |
| - vulnerability-analysis | |
| - security | |
| - lora | |
| - peft | |
| - amd | |
| - rocm | |
| - mi300x | |
| - flash-attention-2 | |
| language: | |
| - en | |
| metrics: | |
| - accuracy | |
| model-index: | |
| - name: CyberSecQwen-4B | |
| results: | |
| - task: | |
| type: text-classification | |
| name: CWE Classification (CTI-RCM) | |
| dataset: | |
| name: CTI-Bench | |
| type: cti-bench | |
| split: cti-rcm | |
| metrics: | |
| - type: accuracy | |
| value: 0.6664 | |
| name: strict_acc (5-trial mean) | |
| verified: false | |
| - task: | |
| type: multiple-choice | |
| name: Cyber Threat Intel Multiple Choice (CTI-MCQ) | |
| dataset: | |
| name: CTI-Bench | |
| type: cti-bench | |
| split: cti-mcq | |
| metrics: | |
| - type: accuracy | |
| value: 0.5868 | |
| name: strict_acc (5-trial mean) | |
| verified: false | |
| # CyberSecQwen-4B — Model Card | |
| > 🏆 **AMD Developer Hackathon submission.** Full project writeup, demo video, and judging context at **[lablab.ai/ai-hackathons/amd-developer/athena19/cybersecqwen-4b-cti-specialist-fine-tuned-on-amd](https://lablab.ai/ai-hackathons/amd-developer/athena19/cybersecqwen-4b-cti-specialist-fine-tuned-on-amd)**. | |
| ## Model Information | |
| CyberSecQwen-4B is a 4B-parameter language model specialized for defensive cybersecurity tasks, fine-tuned from [Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507](https://huggingface.co/Qwen/Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507). It is purpose-built for two evaluation skills measured by [CTI-Bench](https://github.com/xashru/cti-bench): mapping CVE descriptions to their CWE category (CTI-RCM) and answering cyber threat intelligence multiple-choice questions (CTI-MCQ). | |
| Under the evaluation protocol of [Foundation-Sec-8B (arXiv:2504.21039)](https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.21039), CyberSecQwen-4B retains **97.3% of Foundation-Sec-Instruct-8B's CTI-RCM accuracy** while exceeding its CTI-MCQ by **+8.7 points**, at half the parameter count. | |
| The full training, merge, and evaluation pipeline runs end-to-end on a single AMD Instinct MI300X 192GB instance using ROCm + vLLM + FlashAttention-2. A companion model trained with the same recipe on Gemma-4-E2B-it — [Gemma4Defense-2B](https://huggingface.co/athena129/Gemma4Defense-2B) — converges to the same CTI-RCM accuracy within 0.9 points (0.6754 vs 0.6664), demonstrating that the result is recipe-driven rather than substrate-specific. | |
| | | | | |
| |---|---| | |
| | Base model | Qwen/Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507 | | |
| | Parameters | 4.0B total (3.6B non-embedding) | | |
| | Architecture | Qwen3 (RoPE, GQA 32:8, head_dim=128, 36 layers) | | |
| | Context length | 32,768 native | | |
| | Adapter | LoRA r=64, alpha=64, dropout=0.05 | | |
| | Precision | bfloat16 | | |
| | Languages | English | | |
| | License | Apache 2.0 | | |
| ## Intended Use | |
| ### Intended Use Cases | |
| CyberSecQwen-4B is intended for security practitioners, researchers, and engineers working on: | |
| - **CWE classification** — mapping vulnerability descriptions (CVEs, advisories) to MITRE CWE categories | |
| - **Cyber threat intelligence Q&A** — answering structured questions about cybersecurity concepts, attacks, controls | |
| - **Defensive analysis assistants** — supporting human analysts who triage CVEs, prioritize patches, or document threat-actor behavior | |
| - **Cybersecurity benchmarking on AMD hardware** — as a reference fine-tune for the AMD MI300X stack and a comparator for compact-model performance on CTI-Bench | |
| ### Downstream Use | |
| The model can be used as a building block in: | |
| - Security operations center (SOC) ticket triage tools that suggest a likely CWE for an incoming CVE | |
| - Vulnerability management dashboards that pre-classify CVE feeds before human review | |
| - Internal cyber knowledge bases / chat assistants for security teams | |
| - Reference deployments demonstrating CTI workloads on AMD MI300X via vLLM ROCm | |
| ### Out-of-Scope Use | |
| The following uses are out-of-scope and are neither recommended nor intended use cases: | |
| 1. **Generating harmful content** — the model must not be used to produce exploit code, weaponized proof-of-concept payloads, attacker tradecraft, or instructions that materially aid offensive operations. | |
| 2. **Critical security decisions without human oversight** — the model should not auto-execute remediation, blocklist updates, account lockouts, or any action whose reversal carries cost; outputs are advisory and require qualified human review. | |
| 3. **Legal or medical advice** — the model is trained on cybersecurity domain content and is not appropriate for legal, medical, or other regulated-advice contexts. | |
| 4. **Non-security use cases** — general chat, code generation, summarization, translation, or other domains outside its specialization will produce lower-quality output than purpose-built models. | |
| 5. **Violation of laws or regulations** — including but not limited to unauthorized vulnerability scanning, illegal data access, or misuse contrary to applicable cybersecurity statutes (CFAA, GDPR, etc.). | |
| ## Hardware Requirements | |
| The numbers below are first-principles estimates from the bf16 weight footprint plus typical KV-cache overhead at the trained 4096-token context. They are not measured throughput numbers; for production deployment, profile against your specific traffic pattern. | |
| | Specification | CyberSecQwen-4B | Foundation-Sec-Instruct-8B (reference) | | |
| |---|---|---| | |
| | Parameters (total / non-embedding) | 4.0 B / 3.6 B | 8 B | | |
| | bf16 weight file on disk | ~8.0 GB | ~16 GB | | |
| | Inference VRAM, weights only (bf16) | ~8 GB | ~16 GB | | |
| | Inference VRAM, weights + 4 K KV cache (bf16) | ~9–10 GB | ~17–18 GB | | |
| | Single-GPU class (bf16, headroom for batch ≥ 1) | Fits on any 12 GB+ consumer card | Typically requires a 24 GB+ datacenter card | | |
| | AMD Instinct MI300X 192 GB (validated) | Fits trivially with very large batch / long context | Fits trivially | | |
| Notes: | |
| - Compute (FLOPs / token) is approximately proportional to the parameter count at fixed context length, so per-token inference cost is roughly **0.50×** that of an 8 B model. | |
| - Quantized variants (int8, int4) further reduce VRAM by ~½ and ~¼ respectively. The released checkpoint is bf16 only; community quantization is not validated by the authors of this release. | |
| - This model has been validated end-to-end on AMD Instinct MI300X via vLLM ROCm + FlashAttention-2; consult the "How to Get Started" section below for the exact serving command on AMD hardware. | |
| ## How to Get Started with the Model | |
| ```python | |
| from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer | |
| import torch | |
| model_id = "athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B" | |
| tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id) | |
| model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained( | |
| model_id, | |
| torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16, | |
| device_map="auto", | |
| ) | |
| cve = ("A deserialization vulnerability in the destruct() function of Laravel " | |
| "v8.5.9 allows attackers to execute arbitrary commands.") | |
| messages = [{ | |
| "role": "user", | |
| "content": ( | |
| "Analyze the following CVE description and map it to the appropriate CWE. " | |
| "Provide a brief justification for your choice. " | |
| "Ensure the last line of your response contains only the CWE ID.\n\n" | |
| f"CVE Description: {cve}" | |
| ), | |
| }] | |
| prompt = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(messages, tokenize=False, add_generation_prompt=True) | |
| inputs = tokenizer(prompt, return_tensors="pt").to(model.device) | |
| output = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=256, temperature=0.3, do_sample=True) | |
| print(tokenizer.decode(output[0][inputs["input_ids"].shape[1]:], skip_special_tokens=True)) | |
| ``` | |
| ### Serving via vLLM on AMD MI300X | |
| ```bash | |
| docker run --rm --network=host --device=/dev/kfd --device=/dev/dri \ | |
| -e VLLM_ROCM_USE_AITER=1 -e TORCH_BLAS_PREFER_HIPBLASLT=1 \ | |
| vllm/vllm-openai-rocm:latest \ | |
| --model athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B \ | |
| --served-model-name cybersecqwen-4b \ | |
| --attention-backend TRITON_ATTN \ | |
| --dtype bfloat16 \ | |
| --max-model-len 4096 \ | |
| --gpu-memory-utilization 0.9 | |
| ``` | |
| ## Training and Evaluation | |
| ### Training Data | |
| The model was trained on a combined cybersecurity corpus of approximately **14,776 supervised records**: | |
| - **CTI-RCM 2021 (decontaminated)** — CVE → CWE classification examples drawn from MITRE/NVD public records dated 2021. Items appearing in the CTI-Bench evaluation splits were explicitly removed prior to training. (~6,776 records) | |
| - **CVE / CTI synthetic Q&A** — defensive-analyst-style cyber question–answer pairs grounded in CVE descriptions. (~8,000 records) | |
| Decontamination matters here: an earlier internal version of this work showed roughly 72% test-set overlap when trained on undeduplicated CTI corpora, producing inflated CTI-RCM scores that did not generalize. The released model trains exclusively on the 2021 cohort with overlap items removed. | |
| ### Methodology | |
| This model uses **direct supervised fine-tuning (SFT)** of an instruction-tuned base via LoRA. The training recipe was selected through a controlled-experiment series across multiple trained variants spanning two model families and several corpus compositions, with multi-trial benchmark validation locking the released hyperparameters. | |
| Key methodological choices that informed the released recipe: | |
| - **Direct SFT, not knowledge distillation.** Knowledge-distillation variants from a larger 20B teacher model (CyberPal-2.0-20B) were evaluated during recipe development. At the corpus sizes tested (≤ 15K supervised records), direct SFT on the curated corpus outperformed distillation on the headline benchmarks. The released model is direct SFT only. | |
| - **Decontaminated training data.** An earlier internal iteration showed ~72% test-set overlap when trained on undeduplicated CTI corpora, producing inflated CTI-RCM scores that did not generalize. The released model trains exclusively on the 2021 cohort with CTI-Bench overlap items removed. | |
| - **Instruction-tuned base, not pre-trained base.** Direct SFT on the IT checkpoint preserves the existing format priors (terse-answer multiple-choice convention) better than SFT on the pre-trained base; comparable runs on base checkpoints (Qwen3-4B-Base + identical recipe) showed substantial CTI-MCQ format-binding decay at the same corpus scale. | |
| - **Recipe portability across substrates was an explicit design goal.** The same corpus + hyperparameters were applied independently to Gemma-4-E2B-it ([Gemma4Defense-2B](https://huggingface.co/athena129/Gemma4Defense-2B)). Both models converge to within 0.9 points on CTI-RCM, providing a built-in robustness check that the result is recipe-driven rather than substrate-specific. | |
| - **Multi-trial benchmarking.** All headline numbers are means of 5 independent trials with random sampling seeds at temperature 0.3; standard deviations are reported alongside. | |
| - **AMD MI300X end-to-end pipeline.** Training, adapter merging, and evaluation all run on a single AMD Instinct MI300X 192 GB instance via PyTorch + ROCm + Hugging Face transformers + PEFT + TRL inside the official vLLM ROCm Docker image. FlashAttention-2 is enabled in training for forward-and-backward passes; vLLM serves with TRITON_ATTN backend for inference. | |
| ### Training Setup | |
| | Hyperparameter | Value | | |
| |---|---| | |
| | Adapter | LoRA, r=64, alpha=64, dropout=0.05 | | |
| | Target modules | q_proj, k_proj, v_proj, o_proj, gate_proj, up_proj, down_proj | | |
| | Learning rate | 5e-5 | | |
| | Schedule | cosine, warmup_ratio=0.05 | | |
| | Weight decay | 0.01 | | |
| | Per-device batch size | 2 | | |
| | Gradient accumulation | 8 (effective batch = 16) | | |
| | Epochs | 10 | | |
| | Max sequence length | 4096 | | |
| | Precision | bfloat16 | | |
| | Attention implementation | flash_attention_2 | | |
| | Random seed | 42 | | |
| The base model was Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507, an instruction-tuned variant with Apache 2.0 licensing. Training was performed end-to-end on a single AMD Instinct MI300X 192GB instance via the AMD Developer Cloud, using PyTorch + ROCm 7 + Hugging Face transformers, peft, and trl 0.29.1 inside the official `vllm/vllm-openai-rocm` Docker image. | |
| FlashAttention-2 is enabled because Qwen3-4B's attention head dimension (128) fits within the gfx942 shared-memory budget on AMD MI300X — the same FA2 approach is not viable on Gemma-4 due to its 512 head_dim on global-attention layers, which is why the companion Gemma4Defense-2B trains with sdpa instead. | |
| ### Evaluation | |
| Evaluated under the [Foundation-Sec-8B protocol (arXiv:2504.21039 §B.3-B.4)](https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.21039): zero-shot for instruction-tuned models, 5-shot for pretrained base models, dataset's own `Prompt` column as the user message, no system prompt, temperature 0.3, max-tokens 512, concurrency 32. Reported numbers are the mean of **5 independent trials** with random sampling seeds; standard deviations are reported alongside. | |
| #### Headline result | |
| | Benchmark | Metric | CyberSecQwen-4B | Foundation-Sec-Instruct-8B | Δ | | |
| |---|---|---:|---:|---:| | |
| | **CTI-MCQ** (2,500 items) | strict_acc, 5-trial mean ± std | **0.5868 ± 0.0029** | 0.4996 | **+8.7 pp** | | |
| | **CTI-RCM** (1,000 items) | strict_acc, 5-trial mean ± std | **0.6664 ± 0.0023** | 0.6850 | -1.9 pp | | |
| Parseable rates were 100% on CTI-RCM and 98.1% on CTI-MCQ — the model produces well-formed outputs in the expected response convention. | |
| #### Pre / post fine-tune comparison | |
| The improvement attributable to this fine-tune over its starting checkpoint: | |
| | Stage | CTI-RCM | CTI-MCQ | | |
| |---|---:|---:| | |
| | Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507 (raw, instruction-tuned base) | 0.519 | 0.473 | | |
| | **CyberSecQwen-4B (this fine-tune)** | **0.6664** | **0.5868** | | |
| | **Lift** | **+15.1 pp** | **+12.0 pp** | | |
| Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507's raw CTI-MCQ score (0.473) is substantially lower than its corresponding base model's score (0.667) under the chat-template evaluation — the same instruction-tuning-collapses-MCQ effect we observe for Foundation-Sec-Instruct (-15.6 pp vs Foundation-Sec base). This fine-tune recovers and exceeds the IT starting point on both subsets, restoring most of the MCQ format binding the instruction tuning eroded while delivering a substantial CTI-RCM lift. | |
| #### Comparison to other cybersecurity-relevant models we evaluated | |
| All numbers below were measured by us under the protocol above (with the noted shot count), not quoted from third-party papers. CyberPal-2.0-20B numbers reflect a single-trial run at our protocol — its own paper reports 0.874 / 0.757 using a different prompt template (Figure 11 of arXiv:2510.14113); the +2pp MCQ match validated our harness, while the RCM gap likely reflects the template difference. | |
| | Model | Size | CTI-RCM | CTI-MCQ | Notes | | |
| |---|---:|---:|---:|---| | |
| | Foundation-Sec-8B (base) | 8B | 0.745 | 0.655 | 5-shot pretrained reference | | |
| | Foundation-Sec-Instruct-8B | 8B | **0.685** | **0.500** | 0-shot, our TARGET | | |
| | CyberPal-2.0-20B (cyber-pal-security/CyberOss-2.0-20B) | 20B | 0.728* | 0.738* | independently verified at our protocol | | |
| | **CyberSecQwen-4B** (this model) | 4B | **0.6664 ± 0.0023** | **0.5868 ± 0.0029** | 5-trial mean ± std | | |
| | [Gemma4Defense-2B](https://huggingface.co/athena129/Gemma4Defense-2B) (companion) | 2.3B | 0.6754 ± 0.0035 | 0.6042 ± 0.0090 | same recipe, different substrate | | |
| | Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507 (raw) | 4B | 0.519 | 0.473 | 0-shot, our base | | |
| | Qwen3-4B-Base (raw) | 4B | 0.517 | 0.667 | 5-shot | | |
| | Gemma-4-E4B-it (raw) | 5.1B effective | 0.618 | 0.666 | 0-shot | | |
| | Gemma-4-E4B-base (raw) | 5.1B effective | 0.588 | 0.666 | 5-shot | | |
| \* Single-trial values from our independent reproduction. | |
| #### Key highlights | |
| - Beats Foundation-Sec-Instruct-8B on CTI-MCQ by +8.7 points at half the parameter count. | |
| - Stays within ~2 points of Foundation-Sec-Instruct-8B on CTI-RCM under the same evaluation protocol. | |
| - Cross-substrate companion ([Gemma4Defense-2B](https://huggingface.co/athena129/Gemma4Defense-2B)) reproduces the CTI-RCM result within 0.9 points using the same recipe on a different model family. | |
| - Independent reproduction of CyberPal-2.0-20B at the Foundation-Sec protocol confirms its CTI-MCQ accuracy within 2 points of its paper claim. | |
| - Trained, merged, and evaluated end-to-end on a single AMD MI300X 192GB instance with FlashAttention-2 enabled. | |
| ## Limitations | |
| 1. **Domain-specific knowledge limitations.** The model is trained on cybersecurity domain text and is not a general assistant. Tasks outside this domain will produce lower-quality output than purpose-built general models. | |
| 2. **Time-anchored training data.** The CTI-RCM training cohort is drawn from 2021 records. Vulnerability classes that emerged or rose in prevalence after 2021 (e.g., AI/ML-specific weaknesses, recent supply-chain CWEs) are under-represented in training and will be classified less accurately. | |
| 3. **English-only.** All training and evaluation data are in English; multilingual cyber tasks will degrade. | |
| 4. **CTI-RCM gap.** Foundation-Sec-Instruct-8B remains stronger on CTI-RCM under this protocol (-1.9 point gap). Production deployments where CWE classification is the primary metric should benchmark both models on their specific input distribution. | |
| 5. **No safety RLHF.** The model is supervised-fine-tuned only; the training data emphasizes defensive-analyst framing but no formal reinforcement-learning safety alignment was applied. | |
| 6. **Chat template note.** The repository ships with a minimal training-aligned `chat_template.jinja` matching the format used during SFT (Qwen `<|im_start|>` / `<|im_end|>` user-and-assistant turns, no thinking-mode block). Inference via `tokenizer.apply_chat_template(messages, tokenize=False, add_generation_prompt=True)` produces correctly-formatted prompts; downstream tooling that injects system prompts or thinking-mode toggles outside this template may degrade output quality. | |
| ### Recommendations | |
| 1. **Always have qualified security professionals review model outputs before implementation** for any operational use case (patch prioritization, ticket routing, blocklisting). | |
| 2. **Use this model as an assistive tool rather than a replacement for expert human judgment**, especially for novel vulnerability classes outside the 2021 training cohort. | |
| 3. **Validate on your own input distribution** before deployment. Public CTI-Bench performance does not perfectly transfer to internal advisory feeds, vendor-proprietary CWE taxonomies, or non-English content. | |
| 4. **Monitor for drift.** As new CVE / CWE patterns emerge, periodically re-evaluate; consider supplementing with retrieval over a current vulnerability knowledge base for time-sensitive queries. | |
| 5. **Apply standard prompt-injection mitigations** when wrapping the model in agentic workflows that accept external content (advisory feeds, scraped pages); domain-SFT does not confer prompt-injection resistance. | |
| ## Companion Model | |
| [Gemma4Defense-2B](https://huggingface.co/athena129/Gemma4Defense-2B) is a sister release fine-tuned with the same training corpus and hyperparameters, on the Gemma-4-E2B-it base. The two models converge to within 0.9 points on CTI-RCM (0.6664 Qwen vs 0.6754 Gemma, 5-trial mean) — the same recipe produces equivalent task performance across two distinct model families. The Gemma variant is licensed under the Gemma Terms of Use; CyberSecQwen-4B (Apache 2.0) is appropriate for use cases where Gemma terms are not a fit. | |
| ## Citation | |
| If you use this model, please cite: | |
| ```bibtex | |
| @misc{cybersecqwen2026, | |
| title = {CyberSecQwen-4B: A Compact CTI Specialist Fine-Tuned from Qwen3-4B-Instruct-2507 on AMD MI300X}, | |
| author = {Mulia, Samuel}, | |
| year = {2026}, | |
| publisher = {Hugging Face}, | |
| url = {https://huggingface.co/athena129/CyberSecQwen-4B} | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| The evaluation protocol is from: | |
| ```bibtex | |
| @article{foundation-sec-8b, | |
| title = {Foundation-Sec-8B: A Cybersecurity-Specialized Language Model}, | |
| author = {Cisco Foundation AI}, | |
| journal = {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.21039}, | |
| year = {2025}, | |
| url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.21039} | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| The benchmark is from: | |
| ```bibtex | |
| @misc{cti-bench, | |
| title = {CTI-Bench: A Benchmark Suite for Cybersecurity LLMs}, | |
| author = {Alam, Md Tanvirul and Bhusal, Dipkamal and Park, Youngja and Rastogi, Nidhi}, | |
| year = {2024}, | |
| url = {https://github.com/xashru/cti-bench} | |
| } | |
| ``` | |