Scientists just built a powerful AI computer worm that learns as it spreads
Scientists just built a powerful AI computer worm that learns as it spreads This prototype could help the world prepare for AI malware threats, according to the researchers who made it By Jackie Flynn Mogensen edited by Claire Cameron A new study shows that computer malware po
Scientists just built a powerful AI computer worm that learns as it spreads
This prototype could help the world prepare for AI malware threats, according to the researchers who made it
A new study shows that computer malware powered by easily accessible artificial intelligence models is hereโthe research is a โwake-up callโ to take cybersecurity risks from AI more seriously, one expert says.
In the study , researchers created an AI-powered computer โwormโ designed to attack and spread between devicesโrevealing a threat that they say the world is woefully underprepared to fight.
โOur results demonstrate that self-sustaining AI-driven cyber-threats are no longer theoretical,โ the researchers wrote. The paper, first reported by the New York Times, was posted on the preprint server arXiv.org and has yet to be peer-reviewed.
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David Lie, a professor at the University of Toronto, who is familiar with the research but was not directly involved with the study, says the work is a โwake-up callโ that should inspire cyber experts and researchers to develop countermeasures to AI-boosted bugs as fast as possible. โThe demonstration here is that thereโs a motivation to do this sooner rather than later,โ he says.
To make the โwormโโa form of malware that spreads between devices autonomouslyโthe researchers didnโt rely on proprietary AI models from companies such as Anthropic or OpenAI, both of which have issued warnings about the threat of their technology being used by bad actors. Instead the researchers used an undisclosed but freely available AI model โthat anyone can download off the internet,โ they wrote in a post on their labโs website.

