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Post-Quantum Cryptography Readiness Becomes a Strategic Cybersecurity Priority for Enterprises

  Though practical quantum computers may still be years away, organizations are already preparing for the security risks they could create. ...

All the recent news you need to know

GPT-5.6 Sol Debuts With Enhanced Cyber Protections, Limited to Trusted Partners


 

An open preview of OpenAI's next-generation GPT-5.6 model family has been introduced under tight control, marking an important milestone in the advancement of frontier artificial intelligence with an equal emphasis on cybersecurity and responsible deployment. The release is anchored by GPT-5.6 Sol, the company's most advanced and security-hardened model to date. 

It introduces a three-tier architecture comprising Sol, Terra, and Luna, each of which is specifically designed to meet distinct performance, cost, and deployment requirements in software engineering, scientific research, professional knowledge work, computer use, and cybersecurity. OpenAI has restricted access to its API and Codex platforms to a select group of trusted partners following a formal request from the Trump administration rather than releasing the technology to the general public immediately. 

As a result, a cautious strategy emphasizes rigorous security evaluation, controlled real-world testing, and resilience against misuse before the product is available in broad markets. 

GPT-5.6 Introduces a New AI Model Architecture

Moreover, OpenAI is transforming its product architecture, replacing sequential branding with permanent capability tiers in addition to its flagship launch. A long-term restructuring of OpenAI's model portfolio is also part of the GPT-5.6 release, replacing sequential branding with permanent capability tiers that differentiate performance, efficiency, and deployment. 

Sol is the flagship model for advanced reasoning and technical tasks within this framework, Terra delivers performance comparable to GPT-5.5 at approximately half the operational cost for enterprise-scale deployments, while Luna is designed to achieve low latency and low operating cost for high-volume inference applications. Instead of GPT-5.5, which emphasized reasoning and coding improvements, GPT-5.6 emphasizes defensive cybersecurity, controlled deployment, and capability-specific safeguards, reflecting the general trend toward the advancement of security-aware frontier AI. 

The company states that the phased deployment reflects ongoing engagement with federal authorities in an effort to align future frontier AI releases with the objectives outlined in the recent Executive Order governing the assessment of advanced artificial intelligence systems for national security purposes. 

Preparedness Framework Strengthens Cybersecurity Safeguards 

Security remains central to the GPT-5.6 rollout. In its Preparedness Framework, OpenAI has categorized Sol, Terra, and Luna as High Capability models for both cybersecurity, biology, and chemical domains. However, none of these models currently meet the threshold for AI self-improvement as a High Capability model. 

To reduce the increased dual-use risks associated with increasingly capable foundation models, the company has adopted capability-specific safeguards rather than a uniform protection layer in order to mitigate this risk. By combining policy-level restrictions with automated classifiers, cybersecurity- and biology-related prompts are continuously analyzed in real time through the security architecture. 

When potentially high-risk interactions are detected, response generation is temporarily halted until a secondary reasoning model reviews the conversational context to determine whether or not to allow or restrict responses. A risk assessment can also be conducted by OpenAI at an account level to help differentiate legitimate security research and vulnerability analysis from potentially malicious behavior. 

GPT-5.6 Sol Demonstrates Strong Defensive Security Performance

The OpenAI benchmark results demonstrate that GPT-5.6 Sol provides competitive performance in defensive cybersecurity tasks while operating with significantly higher computational efficiency as compared to GPT-5.6 Sol. Sol was able to achieve results comparable to those of leading frontier systems such as Mythos Preview when evaluated on ExploitBench with one-third more tokens required for output. 

In internal testing of large Chromium and Firefox codebases, the model demonstrated the capability of identifying software flaws, isolating vulnerabilities, and providing patching advice as well as basic exploitation primitives. In addition, OpenAI pointed out that the system did not independently develop complete multistage exploit chains, reinforcing its goal of supporting defensive security research rather than facilitating offensive cyber operations. 

Red-Teaming and Safety Testing Ahead of Deployment

The OpenAI preview version included more than 700,000 A100-equivalent GPU hours of automated red-teaming for further strengthening resilience against misuse. Rather than focusing solely on isolated prompt failures, the testing program targeted systemic weaknesses as well as universal jailbreak techniques capable of bypassing model safeguards across a variety of scenarios, thereby enhancing resilience against misuse. 

In the coming week, OpenAI plans to make the models available to a wider range of API and Codex partners. Additionally, OpenAI warns against making government-mediated pre-clearance a permanent requirement for frontier AI deployments. As a result of prolonged restrictions, advanced defensive capabilities may not be available as needed by the wider cybersecurity community to combat rapidly evolving threats if they are prolonged. 

Pricing, Capability Tiers and Enterprise Availability 

Additionally, OpenAI has revised its naming strategy with generation numbers identifying the model family, and Sol, Terra, and Luna remaining persistent capability layers. A tiered pricing structure based on token consumption has been established by the company, with GPT-5.6 Sol charging $5 for a million input tokens and $30 for a million output tokens, Terra charging $2.50 per input and $15 per output, and Luna charging $1 per input and $6 per output, in accordance with the performance profiles and deployment scenarios of each model. 

As part of OpenAI's ongoing commitment to the enterprise, GPT-5.6 Sol will be released on Cerebras in July, delivering inference speeds of up to 750 tokens per second for enterprises with high-throughput AI requirements. 

Government Oversight Shapes GPT-5.6 Rollout 

GPT-5.6's limited release has also been the focus of an ongoing debate concerning national security oversight of frontier AI systems as a result of the limited release. According to OpenAI, the decision was made to limit the initial release following the Trump administration's request for a staggered rollout as government agencies evaluated the impact of the model's advanced capabilities. 

Sam Altman, the Chief Executive Officer of OpenAI, has subsequently advised employees that access to the preview will be approved individually as part of the coordinated rollout process. The request was made in consultation with the Office of the National Cyber Director, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, and Howard Lutnick, Secretary of Commerce. 

It was openAI's belief that government-mediated access should continue to be an exceptional measure rather than a long-term deployment model, even as it cooperated with the temporary review process, arguing extended restrictions may deter developers, enterprises, and cybersecurity practitioners from implementing critical AI capabilities. 

New Reasoning Modes Expand Defensive AI Capabilities 

 Along with deployment and governance, OpenAI has also enhanced the defensive security capabilities of GPT-5.6. According to OpenAI, GPT-5.6 is designed to make prohibited offensive activities more difficult, uncertain, and detectable while preserving legitimate applications such as code review, vulnerability research, patch development, and defensive security testing. 

The Max Reasoning Effort mode introduced in GPT-5.6 supports this approach by allowing Sol to allocate considerable computational resources to complex problems before providing responses. With Ultra reasoning, the execution of long-term tasks which require sustained planning and multi-step analysis is enhanced beyond conventional single-agent execution by orchestrating multiple parallel subagents capable of collaborating collaboratively. 

Scientific Benchmarks and OpenAI's Cybersecurity Roadmap

GPT-5.6 is the latest model family from OpenAI that demonstrates the company's commitment to AI-based defensive cybersecurity. Additionally, the company recently introduced GPT-5.5-Cyber as part of its Daybreak initiative, a specialized model for automated vulnerability discovery, patch generation, and software remediation. 

The OpenAI model achieved state-of-the-art performance across CyberGym (85.6%), ExploitGym (39%), and SEC Bench Pro (69.8%), a significant improvement over GPT-5.5 baselines. Additionally, GPT-5.6 Sol has demonstrated improved performance on GeneBench v1 and improved reasoning efficiency, indicating that the latest releases are an integral part of a broader strategy: advancing frontier AI capabilities while also investing equally in tools and safeguards necessary for enhancing cyber defenses.

Five Eyes Warns New AI Models Pose Urgent Cyber Risk

 

The Five Eyes intelligence alliance has issued a stark warning that the latest generation of artificial intelligence could reshape the cyber threat landscape much faster than most organizations expect. In a joint advisory, intelligence and cybersecurity leaders from the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand said frontier AI models are advancing so quickly that long-standing assumptions about cyber risk may become outdated in only a matter of months. 

The message is clear: AI is no longer just a productivity tool or a research breakthrough. It is also a force multiplier for attackers who want to move faster, exploit weaknesses sooner and launch more sophisticated campaigns. According to the advisory, AI can lower the barriers for malicious actors by making phishing, malware development and vulnerability discovery easier and more efficient. 

That means attackers with limited technical skill may soon be able to carry out actions that once required experienced operators, while more advanced threat groups could automate parts of their workflow at greater scale. The intelligence chiefs said the risk is not theoretical, because the speed of AI development is already changing how quickly vulnerabilities can be found and weaponized. As a result, organizations that wait for mature standards may find themselves exposed before they realize the threat has changed. 

The alliance also emphasized that cyber risk should be treated as a business risk, not just an IT issue. Its guidance urges leaders to understand risk, strengthen foundational security controls and give cyber teams enough authority and resources to respond effectively. The warning stresses that breaches are inevitable, so preparedness matters as much as prevention. In practice, that means testing incident response plans, training staff and making sure the organization can contain and recover from an attack before it turns into a wider operational or financial crisis. 

Five practical steps were highlighted as urgent priorities: reduce unnecessary exposure, accelerate patching, address legacy systems, strengthen identity and access controls and prepare for incidents in advance. The advice is especially relevant because outdated systems and slow patch cycles remain common weaknesses across both public and private sectors. By limiting attack surfaces and tightening access, organizations can reduce the chances that AI-assisted attackers will find an easy opening. The core message is that resilience must be built before a crisis starts, not after. 

For businesses, the report is a reminder that AI’s cyber impact is arriving faster than policy and governance often do. The Five Eyes warning does not argue that AI should be avoided; instead, it says AI should be used deliberately to strengthen defense while leaders move faster on security basics. In other words, the organizations most likely to cope with AI-driven threats will be those that treat cybersecurity as continuous readiness, not a one-time compliance exercise.

Agentic AI Has Become an Identity Crisis for Enterprise Security Teams



Every major technological change has followed a familiar pattern: organizations embrace innovation first, while security teams are left adapting controls after deployment. Cloud computing, Software-as-a-Service (SaaS), and DevOps all reshaped enterprise security in this way. Agentic AI is now driving the next transformation, but with a more complex challenge. Unlike conventional applications, AI agents actively authenticate, interact with APIs, query databases, generate code, and execute workflows across production environments, often using credentials and permissions that organizations have yet to fully catalogue.

This changes the conversation around AI security. Rather than focusing solely on what an AI model can generate, security leaders must determine who an AI agent represents, what systems it can access, who is accountable for its actions, and whether its privileges can be modified or revoked as business requirements evolve.

Traditional identity and access management programs were designed around employees whose access follows established roles and review processes. The rapid expansion of machine identities, including service accounts, API keys, certificates, and workload identities, already challenged that approach. Autonomous AI agents introduce another level of complexity because they can interpret objectives, make decisions, and perform actions independently while operating at machine speed. They can also be deployed by developers, embedded into SaaS platforms, delegated permissions by users, and continue running long after their original purpose has ended.

Static access controls are increasingly inadequate for these systems. An AI assistant summarizing customer support tickets requires far fewer privileges than one capable of issuing refunds, modifying customer records, or deploying production infrastructure. Instead of relying on permanent permissions, organizations should adopt contextual, task-specific, time-limited, and continuously evaluated access policies that adjust according to an agent's responsibilities.

The rapid growth of agentic AI also introduces three identity risks that security teams cannot ignore. Many enterprises already lack visibility into AI agents operating across cloud services, developer environments, and business applications, making ownership and accountability difficult to establish. At the same time, broad permissions granted during testing frequently evolve into long-term identity debt, leaving agents with unnecessary administrative access. Attackers are also exploiting prompt injection techniques, manipulating trusted agents through untrusted content to perform unintended actions when effective privilege boundaries are absent.

Addressing these risks requires identity-centric governance rather than a separate AI security strategy. Every AI agent should possess a unique identity, a clearly assigned owner, a defined business purpose, and a controlled lifecycle supported by strong credential management and continuous monitoring. Automated discovery, policy enforcement, and access reviews will become essential as organizations deploy growing numbers of autonomous systems.

As enterprises integrate agentic AI into everyday operations, the security question is no longer limited to what AI can produce. The greater concern is what autonomous agents are authorized to do, and whether those identities remain governed throughout their entire lifecycle. Organizations that strengthen identity governance today will be better positioned to embrace AI-driven innovation without expanding their attack surface.

FCRF Launches India’s Largest Cybercrime Hackathon for 2026

 

The Future Crime Research Foundation (FCRF) has announced what is being positioned as India’s largest cybercrime hackathon, a move that reflects the growing urgency around digital threats in the country. With cyber fraud, phishing, ransomware, and AI-driven deception becoming more sophisticated, the event aims to create a space where innovators can build practical solutions for real-world investigation and defense. Unlike ordinary coding contests, this hackathon is expected to focus on cybercrime response, digital forensics, and applied security ideas that can help law enforcement and security professionals. 

FCRF, an IIT Kanpur-incubated non-profit known for its work in cyber safety, training, and fraud risk management, has built a reputation as a serious player in India’s cybersecurity ecosystem. Its broader mission is to make India more resilient against evolving digital risks through research, awareness, and capacity building. The hackathon fits neatly into that mission by inviting participants to think beyond theory and build tools that can support investigations, evidence analysis, and cyber defense operations. 

The event is also notable for the kind of collaboration it encourages. By bringing together students, researchers, ethical hackers, developers, and cyber professionals, the hackathon creates a multidisciplinary environment where ideas can move quickly from concept to prototype. That matters because today’s cybercrime problems are no longer limited to one domain; they involve fake identities, financial fraud, social engineering, malware, and emerging AI threats. A challenge of this kind can help discover solutions that are both technically strong and operationally useful. 

For participants, the opportunity goes beyond competition. Hackathons like this can serve as launchpads for careers in cybersecurity, digital forensics, threat intelligence, and policy research. They also offer exposure to problem statements that mirror the pressure and complexity of real cyber investigations. In a country where digital adoption is expanding rapidly, events that combine innovation with public safety can play an important role in strengthening the national security ecosystem.

As FCRF continues to expand its influence through initiatives such as the FutureCrime Summit, this hackathon adds another layer to its growing impact. It signals a shift in how India is approaching cybercrime: not only by reacting to incidents, but by building talent and tools before attacks happen. That makes the event important not just as a competition, but as a serious step toward a more prepared and cyber-aware India.

China's New AI Model Challenges U.S. Cybersecurity Leaders

 



China's latest open-weight artificial intelligence model is drawing attention within the cybersecurity community after independent evaluations indicated that it can rival some of the vulnerability detection capabilities of leading U.S. frontier AI systems. The findings are fueling renewed debate over whether restricting access to advanced American AI models is enough to slow the spread of powerful cyber capabilities.

Chinese AI company Zhipu AI, also known as Z.ai, released its GLM-5.2 model on June 13 under a permissive open-weight license. Unlike proprietary AI systems that are only accessible through controlled cloud services, open-weight models allow researchers and developers to download the model weights and run them on their own hardware. This approach enables offline deployment, customization through fine-tuning, and unrestricted experimentation without requiring ongoing approval from the model developer.

The release stands in contrast to Anthropic's Claude Mythos, one of several advanced AI systems whose availability has been limited under U.S. export controls because of concerns that highly capable models could be misused for offensive cyber operations. While GLM-5.2 still falls behind leading models from Anthropic and OpenAI across many general-purpose reasoning benchmarks, recent testing suggests it performs remarkably well in one highly specialized area: identifying software vulnerabilities.

Independent benchmarking conducted by Semgrep found that GLM-5.2 achieved an F1 score of 39% when detecting Insecure Direct Object Reference (IDOR) vulnerabilities. IDOR flaws arise when applications expose internal object identifiers without properly verifying whether a user is authorized to access the requested resource, making them a common source of unauthorized data access and privilege abuse. Under the same evaluation conditions, Claude Code recorded scores ranging from 32% to 37%, placing GLM-5.2 slightly ahead in this specific cybersecurity task.

The benchmark also underlined a notable economic advantage. Researchers estimated that GLM-5.2 identified vulnerabilities at an average cost of approximately $0.17 per finding, roughly one-sixth of the cost associated with comparable Claude-based workflows. Lower operating costs could make advanced AI-assisted vulnerability research accessible to a much broader range of organizations, independent researchers, and software security teams.

Additional benchmarking conducted by Graphistry reached similar conclusions, reinforcing the view that an openly downloadable Chinese model can compete with frontier U.S. AI systems in narrowly focused cybersecurity applications. The independent evaluations are particularly noteworthy because they relied on standardized testing methodologies designed to reduce benchmark contamination and minimize vendor-specific bias.

The findings arrive amid growing concern in Washington over the national security implications of frontier artificial intelligence. The Trump administration has increasingly treated advanced AI models such as Mythos and Fable as strategic technologies because of their ability to automate complex cybersecurity tasks, including discovering previously unknown software vulnerabilities that could potentially be weaponized in cyber operations.

Those concerns have shaped U.S. export control policies that restrict access to some advanced AI systems for foreign organizations, including researchers based in China. The underlying assumption behind these controls is that limiting access to the most capable American models would delay competing nations from acquiring comparable cyber capabilities. GLM-5.2's performance is prompting renewed questions about whether restricting model access alone can achieve that objective when capable alternatives are being developed elsewhere.

The discussion is further informed by Anthropic's Project Glasswing, which previously demonstrated the cybersecurity potential of frontier AI by identifying more than 10,000 critical software vulnerabilities during its initial research phase. The project illustrated how advanced language models can assist security researchers in reviewing large codebases, prioritizing weaknesses, and accelerating vulnerability discovery. If open-weight models begin approaching similar levels of performance, comparable capabilities may no longer remain exclusive to a small number of tightly controlled AI providers.

The latest development also comes shortly after OpenAI introduced GPT-5.6 with limited availability because of concerns surrounding misuse. Together, these decisions reflect a broader effort by U.S. AI developers to place increasingly capable models behind controlled access mechanisms while balancing innovation with national security considerations.

Cybersecurity researchers note that advances in open-weight models create opportunities as well as risks. Defensive teams could use these systems to automate code reviews, strengthen secure software development practices, and accelerate vulnerability remediation. At the same time, threat actors may attempt to exploit the same capabilities to identify weaknesses in software before organizations have an opportunity to patch them. Because GLM-5.2 can be downloaded and operated locally, these capabilities are available globally regardless of whether users have access to commercial U.S. AI services.

The emergence of GLM-5.2 does not necessarily indicate that Chinese AI has surpassed American frontier models across every benchmark. However, its strong performance in specialized cybersecurity evaluations suggests that the technological gap is narrowing in selected high-value domains. The development is likely to intensify debate over whether hardware restrictions and access controls alone are sufficient to preserve leadership in AI-driven cybersecurity, or whether future policy must place greater emphasis on strengthening defensive capabilities, accelerating software patching, and preparing for a world where advanced vulnerability discovery tools become increasingly accessible worldwide.

Iran-Linked Cyberattacks Against Israel Triple as Critical Infrastructure Faces Rising Threats

 

Surging numbers of cyber intrusions tied to Iran have been logged by Israeli officials, revealing persistent digital hostilities despite lulls in physical warfare. The National Cyber Directorate notes attacks on critical systems now occur at almost three times the frequency seen twelve months ago - this escalation suggests online defenses are just as vital as traditional security setups. While battlefield activity slows, unseen operations thrive behind screens. 

Back in June 2026, Israel saw nearly 4,800 hostile cyber events, according to Yossi Karadi, head of the country's National Cyber Directorate. That number comes from remarks he shared with the German publication Die Welt. Compared to just 1,600 incidents logged one year earlier - during June 2025 - the rise is sharp. 

At that time, Israeli forces were carrying out military actions targeting Iran. Even when fighting slows on the ground, digital clashes do not pause. Though truces might calm frontlines, hacking efforts persist without rest. Karadi pointed out that numerous hacker collectives operate with high-level skills. Despite strong national safeguards, these actors demand ongoing attention. Round-the-clock watch remains necessary, he emphasized. 

One Israeli official noted that the assaults hit many types of groups, not just state bodies. Beyond governmental units, vital utility providers found themselves under pressure. Public administrative hubs also faced repeated digital intrusions. Smaller commercial ventures weren’t spared either - many reported breaches. Accounting practices appeared on the list of compromised entities recently. Legal consultancies showed up frequently in incident reports too. 

So far, Israeli officials say key systems have stayed safe even as attack attempts increase. Confidence in defense strength comes through clearly in Karadi’s remarks - yet he points out dangers still linger. Vigilance must hold steady, because risks remain real and constant. Even when some breaches on vital systems were stopped, firms with poor digital safeguards faced harsher outcomes. 

Some businesses, noted Karadi, fell harder because they were simpler targets - leading to total erasure of their networks after hackers got in. The names of those hit stayed undisclosed. Technical specifics about how it happened? Left out too. 

Across global tensions, digital attacks now routinely accompany physical warfare. Rather than staying separate, hacking efforts blend into modern conflict strategies. Government-linked hackers shift toward striking infrastructure, officials, and corporate networks - often at the same time as troop movements. 

These actions aim less at immediate damage, more at stealing secrets or wiping records clean. Public trust erodes when utilities or institutions face repeated intrusions. Hidden agendas drive many breaches, masking long-term influence goals behind technical exploits. Even though Iran denies launching cyber operations against other nations, it often highlights attacks aimed at its domestic institutions. 

Assigning blame for digital intrusions among states is rarely straightforward - officials commonly reject accusations, leaving experts to piece together evidence using forensic data and collected insights. Despite shifts in traditional combat, cyber operations show no slowdown - recent data from Israel’s National Cyber Directorate confirms their steady rise. 

With global friction still simmering, state-backed hacking efforts keep mounting. Institutions across sectors find themselves under growing strain to adapt defenses accordingly. Sophistication matters more than size when confronting these digital intrusions. Readiness now hinges on responsiveness, not just preparation.

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