Researchers at Google say they have uncovered the first known case of hackers using AI to develop a zero-day cyber exploit.
The Russian hacker group Secret Blizzard has developed its long-running Kazuar backdoor into a modular peer-to-peer (P2P) ...
The Shai-Hulud malware leaked last week is now used in new attacks on the Node Package Manager (npm) index, as infected ...
Turla turns Kazuar into a 3-module P2P botnet, enabling stealthy C2, resilient tasking, and persistent access.
Google says hackers used AI to help build a zero-day exploit targeting 2FA, raising concerns about AI-assisted hacking.
A fake repo impersonating the OpenAI Privacy Filter model racked up 244,000 downloads in under 18 hours before Hugging Face ...
It's been a rough week on the internet: The fallout from the Canvas breach continues, AI chatbots are handing out people's ...
Microsoft Threat Intelligence said attackers placed malicious code inside a Mistral AI download distributed through a Python ...
First AI zero-day: Google found hackers using AI to create a zero-day exploit, marking a first in cybersecurity history. Mass attack thwarted: The flaw targeted an open-source admin tool to bypass 2FA ...
In what could be the first confirmed case of hackers using AI to develop a zero-day exploit, Google says threat actors attempted to weaponize a previously unknown vulnerability capable of bypassing ...
Cybersecurity researcher Allison Nixon joins WIRED to answer the internet’s burning questions about online safety.
Kazuar, a sophisticated malware family attributed to the Russian state actor Secret Blizzard, has been under constant development for years and continues to evolve in support of espionage-focused ...