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Salesforce Unveils AI-Powered Slack Overhaul with 30 Game-Changing Features

 

Salesforce has unveiled a transformative AI overhaul for its Slack platform, introducing 30 new features designed to elevate it from a mere messaging tool to a comprehensive AI-powered workflow engine. Announced by CEO Marc Benioff at a San Francisco event in late March 2026, this update builds on Slack's acquisition five years ago, which has driven two-and-a-half times revenue growth across a million businesses. The changes position Slack at the heart of Salesforce's AI-centric strategy, aiming to automate repetitive tasks and boost enterprise productivity. 

Central to the makeover is an enhanced Slackbot, now boasting agentic capabilities far beyond basic queries. Following a January 2026 update that enabled it to draft emails, schedule meetings, and scan inboxes, the new features introduce reusable AI skills. Users can define custom tasks—like generating a project budget—that Slackbot executes across contexts by pulling data from channels, connected apps, and external sources. These skills come pre-built in a library but allow personalization, slashing manual effort dramatically. 

For instance, commanding Slackbot to "create a budget for the team retreat" triggers it to aggregate expenses from Slack threads, integrate CRM data, draft a plan, and auto-schedule a review meeting with relevant stakeholders based on their roles. This seamless automation extends to Slackbot acting as an MCP client, interfacing with external tools like Salesforce's Agentforce platform from 2024. It routes queries intelligently to the optimal agent or app, minimizing human oversight. 

Meeting management sees significant upgrades too, with Slackbot now transcribing huddles, generating summaries, and extracting action items. Missed details? A quick ask delivers a personalized recap, including your assigned tasks. The bot's reach expands beyond Slack, monitoring desktop activities such as calendars, deals, conversations, and habits to offer proactive suggestions—like drafting follow-ups. Privacy controls let users tweak permissions, ensuring data access aligns with comfort levels. 

These 30 features, rolling out gradually over coming months, underscore Salesforce's vision to embed AI deeply into daily work. Early tests report up to 20 hours weekly productivity gains, powered partly by models like Anthropic’s Claude. Slack evolves into a versatile hub where communication, automation, and decision-making converge, potentially redefining enterprise tools. As businesses grapple with AI integration, this Slack revamp highlights both promise and challenges—like dependency on vendor ecosystems and data governance. For teams already in Salesforce's orbit, it promises efficiency; for others, it signals a competitive push in AI-driven collaboration. The update arrives amid rapid tech shifts, urging companies to adapt swiftly.

Windows 11 Faces Rising Threats from AI Malware and Critical Security Flaws

 

Pressure on Windows 11 security grows - driven by emerging AI-powered malware alongside unpatched flaws threatening companies and everyday users alike. The pace of change in digital threats becomes clearer through recent incidents, especially within large organizational networks. DeepLoad sits at the heart of recent cybersecurity worries. This particular threat skips typical download tactics altogether. 

Instead of dropping files, it operates without any - earning its "fileless" label. Users themselves become part of the breach process. By following deceptive prompts, they run benign-looking instructions in system utilities such as Command Prompt. Once executed, those inputs quietly trigger malicious activity behind the scenes. Since nothing gets written to disk, standard virus scanners often miss what's happening. 

Detection becomes difficult when there’s no file footprint to flag. After running, the malware stays active by embedding itself into system processes while reaching out to remote servers through standard Windows tools. Because it targets confidential information like passwords, its presence poses serious risks inside business environments. What makes it harder to detect is how it blends malicious activity with normal operating routines. Security teams may overlook it during routine checks due to this camouflage technique. 

Artificial intelligence makes existing threats more dangerous. Because AI-driven malware adjusts on the fly, it slips past standard detection systems. As a result, security tools struggle to keep up. With each change the malware makes, response times shrink. The gap between finding a flaw and facing an attack grows narrower by the hour. Meanwhile, security patches have been rolled out by Microsoft to fix numerous high-risk weaknesses. 

Affected are various business-focused builds of Windows 11 - both recent iterations and extended support variants. One major concern involves defects within the Routing and Remote Access Service (RRAS), where exploitation might let threat actors run harmful software from a distance. Full administrative access to compromised machines becomes possible through these gaps. Not just isolated systems feel the impact. 

That last Patch Tuesday, Microsoft fixed over eighty security gaps in its programs - problems hiding even inside tools such as Excel and Outlook. Opening an attachment wasn’t needed; sometimes, just looking at it could activate harmful code, showing how dangerous these weaknesses really are. Experts warn that even emerging AI tools, such as Microsoft Copilot, could introduce new risks if not properly secured, particularly when sensitive data is handled automatically. 

Though companies face the most attacks, regular individuals can still be affected. When new patches arrive, it helps to apply them without delay - timing often matters more than assumed. Opening unknown scripts carries risk; many breaches begin there. Unexpected requests, especially those demanding immediate steps, deserve extra skepticism. 

Change is shaping a new kind of digital danger - cleverer, slyer, built to exploit how people act just as much as system flaws. One moment it mimics trust; the next, it slips through unnoticed.

Hidden Android Malware Capable of Controlling Devices Raises Security Concerns


 

Smartphones have become increasingly important as repositories of identity, finances, and daily communications. The recent identification of a new Android malware strain, recently flagged by the National Cybercrime Threat Analytics Unit and ominously dubbed "God Mode", is indicative of a worrying escalation in mobile security threats. 

As opposed to conventional scams that employ visible deception or user interaction, this variant is designed to persist silently, enabling attackers to gain an unsettling degree of control without prompting immediate suspicion. 

The name of the program is not accidental; it reflects its ability to assume a wide range of permissions and surveillance capabilities once deployed, reducing users to the position of unaware bystanders.  It is noteworthy that this development coincides with an increase in sophisticated malware campaigns throughout India, where cybercriminals are increasingly utilizing the perception of legitimacy of digital services to exploit public trust, mimicking official government platforms. 

Often deployed through widely used messaging channels, these operations take advantage of urgency and limited verification by utilizing carefully orchestrated social engineering tactics, resulting in a seamless illusion of authenticity that has already led to widespread identity theft and financial fraud. In view of these concerns, researchers have identified a threat class that is more deeply ingrained into the Android operating system.

The Oblivion Remote Access Trojan, observed recently, signals the shift from surface-level compromise to systemic invasion. Based on reports, the malware is being distributed through subscription-based distribution models across a wide range of Android devices running versions 8 through 16 and is designed to operate across a broad range of devices.

Using Certo's analysis, it appears that the toolkit is not simply a standalone payload, but rather a structured package with a configurable builder that enables operators to create malicious applications that resemble legitimate applications. As a complement, a dropper mechanism was developed to mimic routine system update prompts, a tactic that blends seamlessly with user expectations and greatly increases the likelihood of execution. 

Kaspersky has found parallel evidence linking this activity to a strain they call "Keenadu," discovered during deeper investigations into firmware-level threats that resembled the earlier Triada threat. It is noteworthy that this variant is persistent: instead of being installed solely by the user, it has been observed embedded within the device firmware itself, indicating a compromise within the supply chain. 

The researchers claim that a tainted dependency introduced during firmware development enabled the malware to be integrated into the core system environment by allowing the malware to persist. Upon attachment to Android’s Zygote process, the malicious code replicates across all running applications on the device, resulting in widespread and difficult to detect control. Because affected devices may reach end users already compromised, manufacturers may be unaware of the intrusion prior to their products being distributed, which has significant consequences. 

There is a deceptively simple entry point into the infection chain associated with such threats: the link or application file is delivered via messaging platforms under the guise of legitimate notifications, often posing as bank alerts, service updates, or time-sensitive announcements. As soon as the application is executed, it strategically requests access to the Accessibility Service an Android feature intended to make the application more usable for people who are differently abled. 

A systemic abuse of this permission occurs in the context described above in order to establish extensive control over device operations. By gaining access to this level of access, the malware can monitor on-screen activity, intercept text communications, and perform autonomous user interactions. The ability to capture one-time passwords, navigate applications, and authorize transactions without explicit user awareness is included in this category. 

Most of the times observed, the initial payload is distributed via widely used communication channels such as instant messaging platforms as an APK file, where it appears as a routine application or system update via widely used communication channels. As a result of its outward appearance, the malware is often not suspected and is more likely to succeed during installation.

The malicious process embeds itself within the device and is designed to maintain persistence and stealth. By avoiding visibility within the standard application interface, the malicious process is evading casual detection while remaining silently operating in the background. The degree of risk introduced by this level of compromise is substantial. 

Through the malware's ability to access sensitive inputs, such as OTPs, personal messages, and contact databases, conventional authentication procedures are effectively bypassed. Further, by utilizing its ability to initiate or redirect calls, overlay fraudulent interfaces over legitimate banking applications, and simulate genuine user behavior, sophisticated financial exploitation and data exfiltration can be accomplished. 

Additionally, the threat is lowly visible; the lack of overt indicators, combined with its ability to avoid basic scrutiny, make it difficult for users to become aware of a breach until tangible damage has already occurred - financial or otherwise. Because the vulnerability does not uniformly impact all Android devices, assessing exposure becomes an important first step when confronted with this backdrop. 

According to current findings, the risk is primarily confined to smartphones equipped with MediaTek system-on-chip architectures, although devices that are powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon or Google Tensor are not affected. 

Users can verify their device's status by verifying its exact model in system settings and referencing its hardware specifications using manufacturer documentation. It becomes more urgent when the MediaTek chipset is identified to ensure that the latest security patches are applied as soon as possible. 

While a fix has been reportedly issued at the chipset level, its effectiveness is determined by the timely distribution by individual device manufacturers, making timely system updates a decisive factor in preventing exposures. A broader defensive posture requires a combination of technical safeguards and user discipline in addition to identification and patching. 

Security applications can not directly address firmware-level vulnerabilities, but they still play an important role in detecting secondary payloads, such as spyware or malicious applications, which may be deployed following a compromise. It is also important to minimize sensitive data stored locally on devices, particularly credentials, recovery keys, and financial information that could be accessed if access is obtained. Also highlighted in this case is the importance of physical security, as certain exploit vectors may require direct device access, which makes unattended or improperly handled devices potentially vulnerable. 

Additionally, complementary measures add essential layers of resistance against unauthorised activity, such as robust screen locks, shorter auto-lock intervals, and multi-factor authentication across critical accounts. In addition to reducing credential exposure, using encrypted password managers will help reduce device-level control capabilities, such as USB-restricted mode, when available, to limit data transfer capabilities while locked. 

As a result of these measures, the underlying vulnerability remains, however a layered security framework is established that significantly reduces the likelihood and impact of exploitation in the real world. As a result, these deeply embedded Android threats highlight a significant shift in the mobile security landscape, where risks are no longer restricted to user-level interactions, but extend to the underlying architecture of the device itself. 

With this evolving technology, users and manufacturers need to remain vigilant and informed, emphasizing proactive security hygiene, timely software maintenance, and carefully examining digital interactions. As threat actors continue to refine their methods, resilience will be determined by the development of layered, adaptive defense strategies that anticipate compromise and limit its impact, rather than a single safeguard.

Microsoft Releases AI Upgrades, Launches Copilot Cowork to Early Access Customers


In an effort to enhance its AI offering and increase adoption, Microsoft (MSFT.O) recently introduced new features in its Copilot research assistant that would enable users to employ various AI models concurrently within the same workflow.

Instead of relying on a single model, Copilot's Researcher agent can now pull outputs from both OpenAI's GPT and Anthropic's Claude models for each response, thanks to a new feature called "Critique."

According to Microsoft, Claude will check the quality and correctness of the response before GPT provides it to the user. In the future, the business hopes to make that workflow bidirectional so that GPT may also evaluate Claude's writings.

"Having different models from ​different vendors in Copilot is highly attractive - but we're taking this to the next level, where customers actually get the benefits of the models working together," Nicole Herskowitz, VP of Copilot and  Microsoft, said to Reuters. 

The multi-model strategy will assist in increasing productivity and quality for customers by accelerating user workflow, controlling AI hallucinations, which occur when systems give incorrect information, and producing more dependable outputs.

Additionally, Microsoft is introducing a feature called "Council" that will let users compare results from various AI models side by side. The updates coincide with Microsoft expanding access to its new Copilot Cowork agentic AI tool for members of its "Frontier" program, which gives users early access to some of its most recent AI innovations.

According to Jared Spataro, Microsoft's AI-at-Work efforts leader, “We work only in a cloud environment, and we work only on behalf of the user. So you know exactly what information it (Copilot Cowork) has access ​to.”

On Monday, the company's stock increased by almost 1%. However, as investor confidence in AI declines, the stock is poised for its worst quarter since the global financial crisis of 2008, with a nearly 25% decline.

Microsoft capitalized on the increasing demand for autonomous AI agents earlier this month by releasing Copilot Cowork, a solution based on Anthropic's popular Claude Cowork product, in testing mode.

In the face of fierce competition from rivals like Google (GOOGL.O), the new tab Gemini, and autonomous agents like Claude Cowork, the Windows manufacturer has been rushing to enhance its Copilot assistant to promote greater usage.

Quantum Computing Could Threaten Bitcoin Security Sooner Than Expected, Study Finds

 



New research suggests the cryptocurrency industry may have less time than anticipated to prepare for the risks posed by quantum computing, with potential implications for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other major digital assets.

A whitepaper released on March 31 by researchers at Google indicates that breaking the cryptographic systems securing these networks may require fewer than 500,000 physical qubits on a superconducting quantum computer. This marks a sharp reduction from earlier estimates, which placed the requirement in the millions.

The study brings together contributors from both academia and industry, including Justin Drake of the Ethereum Foundation and Dan Boneh, alongside Google Quantum AI researchers led by Ryan Babbush and Hartmut Neven. The research was also shared with U.S. government agencies prior to publication, with input from organizations such as Coinbase and the Ethereum Foundation.

At present, no quantum system is capable of carrying out such an attack. Google’s most advanced processor, Willow, operates with 105 qubits. However, researchers warn that the gap between current hardware and attack-capable machines is narrowing. Drake has estimated at least a 10% probability that a quantum computer could extract a private key from a public key by 2032.

The concern centers on how cryptocurrencies are secured. Bitcoin relies on a mathematical problem known as the Elliptic Curve Discrete Logarithm Problem, which is considered practically unsolvable using classical computers. However, Peter Shor demonstrated that quantum algorithms could solve this problem far more efficiently, potentially allowing attackers to recover private keys, forge signatures, and access funds.

Importantly, this threat does not extend to Bitcoin mining, which relies on the SHA-256 algorithm. Experts suggest that using quantum computing to meaningfully disrupt mining remains decades away. Instead, the vulnerability lies in signature schemes such as ECDSA and Schnorr, both based on the secp256k1.

The research outlines three potential attack scenarios. “On-spend” attacks target transactions in progress, where an attacker could intercept a transaction, derive the private key, and submit a fraudulent replacement before confirmation. With Bitcoin’s average block time of 10 minutes, the study estimates such an attack could be executed in roughly nine minutes using optimized quantum systems, with parallel processing increasing success rates. Faster blockchains such as Ethereum and Solana offer narrower windows but are not entirely immune.

“At-rest” attacks focus on wallets with already exposed public keys, such as reused or inactive addresses, where attackers have significantly more time. A third category, “on-setup” attacks, involves exploiting protocol-level parameters. While Bitcoin appears resistant to this method, certain Ethereum features and privacy tools like Tornado Cash may face higher exposure.

Technically, the researchers developed quantum circuits requiring fewer than 1,500 logical qubits and tens of millions of computational operations, translating to under 500,000 physical qubits under current assumptions. This is a substantial improvement over earlier estimates, such as a 2023 study that suggested around 9 million qubits would be needed. More optimistic models could reduce this further, though they depend on hardware capabilities not yet demonstrated.

In an unusual move, the team did not publish the full attack design. Instead, they used a zero-knowledge proof generated through the SP1 zero-knowledge virtual machine to validate their findings without exposing sensitive details. This approach, rarely used in quantum research, allows independent verification while limiting misuse.

The findings arrive as both industry and governments begin preparing for a post-quantum future. The National Security Agency has called for quantum-resistant systems by 2030, while Google has set a 2029 target for transitioning its own infrastructure. Ethereum has been actively working toward similar goals, aiming for a full migration within the same timeframe. Bitcoin, however, faces slower progress due to its decentralized governance model, where major upgrades can take years to implement.

Early mitigation efforts are underway. A recent Bitcoin proposal introduces new address formats designed to obscure public keys and support future quantum-resistant signatures. However, a full transition away from current cryptographic systems has not yet been finalized.

For now, users are advised to take precautionary steps. Moving funds to new addresses, avoiding address reuse, and monitoring updates from wallet providers can reduce exposure, particularly for long-term holdings. While the threat is not immediate, researchers emphasize that preparation must begin well in advance, as advances in quantum computing continue to accelerate.

Anthropic's Claude Code Leak: 500K Lines Exposed

 

On March 31, 2026, Anthropic, the safety-focused AI company behind Claude, accidentally leaked over 500,000 lines of proprietary source code for its Claude Code tool through a public npm package update. This incident, the second such breach in a year, exposed nearly 2,000 TypeScript files via a misincluded debugging file in version 2.1.88, which linked to a publicly accessible zip archive on Anthropic's Cloudflare storage.Security researcher Chaofan Shou quickly spotted the error, sparking rapid mirroring on GitHub where repositories amassed thousands of stars before takedowns. 

The leak revealed Claude Code's full architecture, including 44 feature flags for unreleased capabilities like a "persistent assistant" that runs in the background even when users are inactive. Other hidden gems included session review for performance improvement across conversations, remote control from mobile devices, and a roadmap toward longer autonomous tasks, enhanced memory, and multi-agent collaboration. Developers also uncovered internal tools, prompts, and even a "pet system" codenamed Buddy with species and rarity tiers, hinting at gamified enterprise features. 

Anthropic swiftly responded, calling it "human error" in a release packaging issue, not a security breach, with no sensitive data exposed. The company issued over 8,000 DMCA takedown requests to platforms like GitHub, removing thousands of forks within days. Claude Code creator Boris Cherny confirmed a skipped manual deploy step caused the mishap, and Anthropic pledged process improvements to prevent recurrence. 

This incident underscores vulnerabilities in AI firms' deployment pipelines, especially for a lab positioning itself as security-conscious amid IPO preparations. Competitors now gain insights into production-grade AI coding agents, potentially accelerating their own developments in agent orchestration and tools. While unlikely to derail Anthropic's $340 billion valuation, it highlights how securing AI systems rivals defending against AI-powered threats. 

Ultimately, the Claude Code leak serves as a stark reminder for the AI industry to fortify internal safeguards as innovations race ahead. It boosts hype around Anthropic's capabilities while exposing the human element in high-stakes tech releases. As external developers reverse-engineer remnants, the focus shifts to ethical use and robust verification in open-source ecosystems.

Axios Supply Chain Attack Exposes npm Security Gaps with Token-Based Compromise

 

A breach in the Axios library - one of many relied upon in modern web development - has exposed flaws that linger beneath surface-level fixes. Through stolen access, hackers slipped harmful updates into what users assumed was safe code. This event underscores how fragile trust can be, even when systems claim stronger defenses. Progress in verifying packages and securing logins appears incomplete, given such exploits still succeed. Confidence in tools like those hosted on npm remains shaken by failures that feel both avoidable and familiar. 

A lead developer’s extended-use npm token was accessed by hackers, reports show from Huntress and Wiz. Through this entry point, altered builds of Axios emerged - versions laced with hidden code deploying a multi-system remote control tool. Not limited to one environment, the harmful update reached machines running on macOS, Windows, or Linux setups. Lasting just under three hours, the rogue releases stayed active online until taken down. 

Axios ranks among the top tools in JavaScript, downloaded more than a hundred million times each week, found in roughly eight out of ten cloud setups. Moments after the tainted update went live, malware started spreading fast; Huntress later verified infection on 135 machines while the vulnerability was active. Hidden within a third-party addition, plain-crypto-js slipped into Axios’s environment without touching its main codebase. Not through direct changes but via a concealed payload activated after installation. 

Running quietly once set up, it triggered deployment of a remote access tool on developers’ systems. Built to avoid notice, the malicious code erased itself under certain conditions. Altered components were restored automatically, masking traces left behind. One reason this breach stands out lies in its method - evading defenses thought secure. Even after adopting standard safeguards like OIDC for verified publishing and robust supply chain models, outdated tools remained active. 

A leftover npm access key opened the door despite stronger systems being in place. Where two login paths existed, preference went to the original token, rendering recent upgrades useless under that condition. This is now the third significant breach of the npm supply chain in just a few months, after events such as the Shai-Hulud incident. 

Each time, hackers used compromised maintainer login details to gain access, revealing a recurring weakness across the system. Though security professionals highlight benefits of measures like multi-factor verification and origin monitoring, these fail to block every threat when login data is exposed. 

With growing pressure, companies must examine third-party links, apply tighter rules on software setup, yet phase out outdated access methods instead. When trust rests on open-source tools, weaknesses in how credentials are handled can still invite breaches. A single event shows flaws aren’t always in the code itself - sometimes they hide where access is managed.

Arbitrary File Write Bug in Gigabyte Control Center Sparks Security Alerts


 

It is becoming increasingly apparent that trusted system utilities are embedded with persistent security risks, as GIGABYTE Control Center, a widely deployed Windows-based management tool that is packaged with select devices, has been put under scrutiny following the disclosure of a critical security flaw. 

Inadvertently, the software designed to give users centralized control over essential hardware functions exposed a potential pathway for threat actors to alter system behavior on a fundamental level. Despite the fact that the vulnerability has been addressed, it is potential to exploit it in order to execute unauthorized code, write arbitrary files, and potentially disrupt system availability through denial-of-service. 

Since the utility is deeply entwined with device operations and is installed on GIGABYTE motherboards, the vulnerability has significant implications for users as well as enterprises, making it increasingly important to deploy patches and harden systems in a timely manner. Software vulnerable to this vulnerability is GIGABYTE Control Center, which is pre-installed on all laptops and supported motherboards, serving as a central point of configuration and oversight for the entire system.

Integrated with Windows, it provides a comprehensive set of operational controls for monitoring and managing hardware, adjusting thermal and fan curves, optimizing performance, customizing RGB lighting, and installing driver and firmware updates. 

The broad access to underlying system functions, which is intended to enhance user convenience, amplifies the potential impact of any vulnerabilities in the system. There is a particular concern regarding an integrated "pairing" feature designed to facilitate communication between host systems and external devices or services over a network. 

When enabled in versions of Control Center up to and including 25.07.21.01, this function significantly expands the application's interaction surface. Thus, it introduces a vulnerability that can be exploited under specific circumstances, increasing the attack surface of affected systems by creating a network-exposed vector. It is this feature that makes it an important focal point when assessing the overall risk profile associated with the vulnerability because it is linked to elevated system privileges and network-enabled communication. 

According to additional technical analysis, the issue may be related to the vulnerability CVE-2026-4415, which has a rating of 9.2 under CVSS 4.0 framework, and has been identified within the pairing mechanism within GIGABYTE Control Center versions 25.07.21.01 and earlier. As a result of insufficient safeguards regarding how the application handles network-initiated interactions, David Sprüngli is credited with discovering the vulnerability. 

The pairing feature provides an opportunity for unauthenticated remote actors to write arbitrary files across the system's file structure when it is active. With the utility's elevated privileges and close integration with system processes, such access is potentially useful for the execution of remote code, escalation of privileges, or disruption of system availability. 

A particularly concerning aspect of the vulnerability is its ability to bypass conventional trust boundaries, effectively creating a potential attack vector from a legitimate management feature. A new version of GIGABYTE's Control Center has been released, titled 25.12.10.01, which introduces a series of corrections across multiple functional layers, including download handling routines, message validation processes, and command-level encryption, as well as corrective measures for multiple functional layers. In combination, these enhancements mitigate the risks associated with the exposed pairing interface. 

According to the company's advisory, users should update immediately and obtain the patched version only through official software distribution channels, thereby reducing the possibility of compromised or tampered installers occurring. Such incidents reinforce the importance of treating vendor-supplied utilities the same way we'd treat any externally sourced software, especially when they're elevated privileges and have network access. 

The company and individual users should both adopt a proactive patch management strategy, audit pre-installed applications on a regular basis, and disable features not specifically required for use, such as remote pairing. The implementation of multiple security controls, including endpoint monitoring, network segmentation, and strict access policies, can significantly reduce exposure to similar threats. 

The integration of hardware ecosystems and software-driven management layers becomes increasingly complex, so maintaining vigilance over these trusted components is crucial to maintaining the integrity of the overall system.

New Chaos Malware Variant Expands to Cloud Targets, Introduces Proxy Capability

 



A newly observed version of the Chaos malware is now targeting poorly secured cloud environments, indicating a defining shift in how this threat is being deployed and scaled.

According to analysis by Darktrace, the malware is increasingly exploiting misconfigured cloud systems, moving beyond its earlier focus on routers and edge devices. This change suggests that attackers are adapting to the growing reliance on cloud infrastructure, where configuration errors can expose critical services.

Chaos was first identified in September 2022 by Lumen Black Lotus Labs. At the time, it was described as a cross-platform threat capable of infecting both Windows and Linux machines. Its functionality included executing remote shell commands, deploying additional malicious modules, spreading across systems by brute-forcing SSH credentials, mining cryptocurrency, and launching distributed denial-of-service attacks using protocols such as HTTP, TLS, TCP, UDP, and WebSocket.

Researchers believe Chaos developed from an earlier DDoS-focused malware strain known as Kaiji, which specifically targeted exposed Docker instances. While the exact operators behind Chaos remain unidentified, the presence of Chinese-language elements in the code and the use of infrastructure linked to China suggest a possible connection to threat actors from that region.

Darktrace detected the latest variant within its honeypot network, specifically on a deliberately misconfigured Hadoop deployment that allowed remote code execution. The attack began with an HTTP request sent to the Hadoop service to initiate the creation of a new application.

That application contained a sequence of shell commands designed to download a Chaos binary from an attacker-controlled domain, identified as “pan.tenire[.]com.” The commands then modified the file’s permissions using “chmod 777,” allowing full access to all users, before executing the binary and deleting it from the system to reduce forensic evidence.

Notably, the same domain had previously been linked to a phishing operation conducted by the cybercrime group Silver Fox. That campaign, referred to as Operation Silk Lure by Seqrite Labs in October 2025, was used to distribute decoy documents and ValleyRAT malware, suggesting infrastructure reuse across campaigns.

The newly identified sample is a 64-bit ELF binary that has been reworked and updated. While it retains much of its original functionality, several features have been removed. In particular, capabilities for spreading via SSH and exploiting router vulnerabilities are no longer present.

In their place, the malware now incorporates a SOCKS proxy feature. This allows compromised systems to relay network traffic, effectively masking the origin of malicious activity and making detection and mitigation more difficult for defenders.

Darktrace also noted that components previously associated with Kaiji have been modified, indicating that the malware has likely been rewritten or significantly refactored rather than simply reused.

The addition of proxy functionality points to a broader monetization strategy. Beyond cryptocurrency mining and DDoS-for-hire operations, attackers may now leverage infected systems to provide anonymized traffic routing or other illicit services, reflecting increasing competition within cybercriminal ecosystems.

This shift aligns with a wider trend observed in other botnets, such as AISURU, where proxy services are becoming a central feature. As a result, the threat infrastructure is expanding beyond traditional service disruption to include more complex abuse scenarios.

Security experts emphasize that misconfigured cloud services, including platforms like Hadoop and Docker, remain a critical risk factor. Without proper access controls, attackers can exploit these systems to gain initial entry and deploy malware with minimal resistance.

The continued evolution of Chaos underlines how threat actors are persistently enhancing their tools to expand botnet capabilities. It also reinforces the need for continuous security monitoring, as changes in how APIs and services function may not always appear as direct vulnerabilities but can exponentially increase exposure.

Organizations are advised to regularly audit configurations, restrict unnecessary access, and monitor for unusual behavior to mitigate the risks posed by increasingly adaptive malware threats.

Apple Reinforces Digital Privacy for Users Without Restricting Law Enforcement Oversight


 

The company has long positioned its privacy architecture as a defining aspect of its ecosystem, marketing it as more than a feature, but a fundamental right built into its products as well. However, the latest disclosures emerging from US legal proceedings suggest that privacy boundaries are neither absolute nor impermeable, and that a more nuanced reality emerges. 

It is the "Hide My Email" function that is under scrutiny, a tool designed to hide users' real email addresses from third-party apps and websites. Despite its success in minimizing commercial tracking and unsolicited exposure, recent legal revelations indicate that this layer of anonymity can be effectively reversed under lawful authority to ensure effectiveness. 

Moreover, the development highlights the important distinction between consumer privacy assurances and judicial obligations imposed by technology companies, reframing conditional anonymity as a controlled filter operating within clearly defined legal limits rather than as a cloak of invisibility. 

Subsequent disclosures from investigative proceedings provide additional insight into how this conditional anonymity works in practice. Apple has received a request from federal authorities, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, for subscriber information regarding a threatening communication directed at Alexis Wilkins, a person who was reported to have been associated with FBI Director Kash Patel.

According to the warrant application, Apple was able to correlate the anonymized "Hide My Email" alias to a specific user account by providing details on subscriber identification along with a wider dataset that contained over a hundred additional aliases created under the same profile. It was found that Homeland Security Investigations investigated an alleged identity fraud operation in a similar manner, in which multiple masked email identities were linked to Apple accounts under underlying identity fraud schemes, allowing investigators to consolidate disparate digital footprints into one framework for attribution. 

Collectively, these examples reveal an important structural aspect of Apple's ecosystem: while certain layers of iCloud services are protected by end-to-end encryption, a portion of account and communication information is still accessible under valid legal processes. Despite the fact that subscriber information, including names, billing credentials, and associated identifiers, remains within the compliance boundary rather than a cryptographic boundary, which does not contain end-to-end encryption of the content. 

The delineation reinforces an issue of broader significance to the industry, in which conventional email infrastructure is built without pervasive encryption safeguards, making it inherently vulnerable to lawful interception by its users. It is against this backdrop that privacy-conscious individuals are increasingly turning to platforms such as Signal, which offer default end-to-end encryption and minimal data retention. 

As for Apple, it has not responded directly to these developments, although the disclosures have prompted a review of how privacy assurances are communicated and understood within technologically advanced and legally obligated environments. A sustained increase in government access requests against major technology providers is reflective of the context in which these disclosures are made. 

According to Apple's transparency data, it processed more than 13,000 such requests for customer information during the first half of 2025, with email-related records contributing significantly to account attribution, threat analysis, and criminal investigations due to their evidentiary value. Nevertheless, this dynamic is not limited to Apple's ecosystem.

Similar constraints exist among providers such as Google and Microsoft, where legacy email protocols - architected in an era before modern encryption standards - continue to limit the amount of privacy protection inherent within their systems. Although niche services such as Proton have attempted to address this issue by implementing end-to-end encryption by design, their adoption remains marginal relative to the global email user base, which underscores the persistence of structurally exposed communication channels within this environment. 

Apple’s position is especially interesting in light of the divergence between its privacy-oriented messaging and its email infrastructure's technical realities. Hide My Email provides demonstrably reduced exposure to commercial tracking and data aggregation, however it does not alter the underlying compliance model governing lawful data access. 

The distinction has re-ignited an ongoing policy debate around encryption, a controversy Apple has previously encountered with the use of iMessage and other Apple services. Regulations and law enforcement agencies contend that inaccessible communications impede legitimate investigations, and extending comparable end-to-end encryption to iCloud Mail may result in renewed friction.

In contrast, privacy advocates contend that any lowering of encryption standards introduces systemic security risks. Thus, email privacy remains a compromise governed both by legal frameworks as well as engineering decisions at present. 

It is common for users seeking stronger privacy to rely on specialized encryption platforms, but such platforms present usability constraints and interoperability challenges with the larger email ecosystem. There is an important distinction to be drawn from recent federal requests: privacy controls designed to limit the visibility of corporate data do not automatically ensure that government access is restricted. 

The implementation of Apple's products is within this boundary, balancing user expectations with statutory obligations. However, there remains a considerable gap between perceptions and operational realities that calls for reevaluation. It is unclear if the company will extend its end-to-end encryption model to email services, particularly in light of the political and regulatory implications of such a shift. 

It is important to note that privacy is not a binary guarantee, but rather a layered construct that is shaped by both technical design and legal jurisdiction as a result of the developments. As such, organizations and individuals alike should reassess their threat models, identifying clearly between protections required for sensitive communications as opposed to protections against commercial data exposure. 

In cases where confidentiality is extremely important, standard email services may be insufficient, which necessitates selective adoption of stronger encryption techniques, secure communication channels, and disciplined data handling procedures. As a result of clear, and often misunderstood, boundaries within which privacy features operate, informed usage remains the most reliable safeguard in an environment where privacy features operate within clearly defined boundaries.

How Duck.ai Offer Better Privacy Compared to Commercial Chatbots


Better privacy with DuckDuckGo's AI bot

Privacy issues have always bothered users and business organizations. With the rapid adoption of AI, the threats are also rising. DuckDuckGo’s Duck.ai chatbot benefits from this.

The latest report from Similarweb revealed that traffic to Duck.ai increased rapidly last month. The traffic recorded 11.1 million visits in February 2026, 300% more than January. 

Duck.ai's sudden traffic jump

The statistics seem small when compared with the most popular chatbots such as ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. 

Similarweb estimates that ChatGPT recorded 5.4 billion visits in February 2026, and Google’s Gemini recorded 2.1 billion, whereas Claude recorded 290.3 million. 

For DuckDuckGo, the numbers show a good sign, as the bot was launched as beta in 2025, and has shown a sharp rise in visits. 

DuckDuckGo browser is known for its privacy, and the company aims to apply the same principle to its AI bot. Duck.ai doesn't run a bespoke LLM, it uses frontier models from Meta, Anthropic, and OpenAI, but it doesn't expose your IP address and personal data. 

Duck.ai's privacy policy reads, "In addition, we have agreements in place with all model providers that further limit how they can use data from these anonymous requests, including not using Prompts and Outputs to develop or improve their models, as well as deleting all information received once it is no longer necessary to provide Outputs (at most within 30 days, with limited exceptions for safety and legal compliance),”

Duck.ai is famous now

What is the reason for this sudden surge? The bot has two advantages over individual commercial bots like ChatGPT and Gemini, it offers an option to toggle between multiple models and better privacy security. The privacy aspect sets it apart. Users on Reddit have praised Duck.ai, one person noting "it's way better than Google's," which means Gemini. 

Privacy concerns in AI bots

In March, Anthropic rejected a few applications of its technology for mass surveillance and weapons submitted by the Department of Defense. The DoD retaliated by breaking the contract. Soon after, OpenAI stepped in. 

The incident stirred controversies around privacy concerns and ethical AI use. This explains why users may prefer chatbots like Duck.ai that safeguard user data from both the government and the big tech. 

Infiniti Stealer Targets Mac Users with ClickFix Social Engineering Attack

 

Not stopping at typical malware tricks, Infiniti Stealer targets Macs using clever social manipulation instead of system flaws. Security firm Malwarebytes uncovered the operation, highlighting how it dodges standard protection tools. Once inside, the software slips under the radar easily. What stands out is its reliance on tricking users, not breaking through digital walls. 

Starting off, attackers rely on a technique called ClickFix, tricking people into running harmful software without realizing it. Instead of clear warnings, users land on fake websites designed to look real - usually through deceptive emails or infected links. These pages imitate trusted security checks used by Cloudflare, copying their layout closely. A common "I am not a robot" checkbox shows up first. Then comes misleading directions hidden inside what seems like normal steps. Though simple at glance, each piece nudges victims toward unintended actions.  

Spotlight pops up when users start the process, guiding them toward finding Terminal. Once there, they run an unfamiliar line of code by pasting it directly. What seems like a small task hides its real intent - execution happens under human control, so security tools often stand down. The trick works because actions led by people rarely trigger alarms, even if those actions carry risk. Hidden behind normal behavior, the command slips through defenses without raising flags. 

Execution triggers installation of Infiniti Stealer onto the system. Though built in Python, it becomes a standalone macOS executable through compilation with Nuitka. Because of this conversion, detection by security software weakens. Analysis grows more difficult when facing such repackaged threats instead of standard interpreted scripts. Stealth improves simply by changing how the code runs.  

Once installed, it starts pulling private details from the compromised device. Things like stored login credentials, web history including cookies, snapshots of screens appear among what gets gathered. From there, the data flows toward remote machines managed by hackers - opening doors to hijacked accounts or stolen identities. What leaves the machine often fuels more invasive misuse downstream. What stands out is how this campaign signals a change in the way attackers operate. 

Moving away from technical flaws or harmful file attachments, they now lean heavily on manipulating people’s actions - especially by abusing their confidence in everyday website features such as CAPTCHA challenges. When unsure, steer clear of directions from unknown online sources - particularly if they involve running Terminal commands. Real authentication processes never ask people to enter scripts into core system utilities. 

When signs of infection appear, stop using the device without delay. Security professionals suggest changing credentials through an unaffected system right away. Access tokens tied to the infected hardware should be invalidated promptly. A different machine must handle these updates to prevent further exposure.

Critical Fortinet FortiClient EMS Flaw Now Actively Exploited in Cyberattacks

 

A critical vulnerability in Fortinet’s FortiClient EMS platform is now being actively exploited in real‑world attacks, according to threat‑intelligence firm Defused. Tracked as CVE‑2026‑21643, this SQL injection bug affects FortiClient EMS version 7.4.4 and allows unauthenticated attackers to run arbitrary code or commands through the platform’s web interface. The flaw can be triggered by specially crafted HTTP requests that smuggle malicious SQL statements via the Site header, giving an attacker a powerful foothold on unpatched systems. 

Modus operandi 

The vulnerability lives in the FortiClient EMS GUI, which organizations use to manage and deploy Forticlient endpoints across their networks. By manipulating the Site header in an HTTP request, an attacker can inject SQL code into the back‑end database, bypassing authentication entirely. This “low‑complexity” attack vector means that even unsophisticated adversaries can weaponize the bug if they can reach the exposed web interface. Because the flaw is critical, it can lead to full system compromise, data theft, or a springboard into a broader corporate network. 

Defused reported that it observed the first exploitation of CVE‑2026‑21643 just four days after the initial vulnerability disclosures. The firm noted that over 900 FortiClient EMS instances are publicly exposed on the internet according to Shodan data, giving attackers a large pool of potential targets. Meanwhile, Internet‑security watchdog Shadowserver is tracking more than 2,000 exposed FortiClient EMS web interfaces, with over 1,400 IPs located in the United States and Europe. Despite this, Fortinet has not yet updated its advisory to mark the bug as “exploited in the wild,” even though a local media outlet reached out to confirm active attacks. 

Fortinet vulnerabilities have repeatedly been abused in ransomware and cyber‑espionage campaigns, often as zero‑days while patches are still rolling out. In the case of FortiClient EMS, prior SQL injection flaws were exploited in ransomware attacks and by state‑sponsored groups such as China’s “Salt Typhoon” to breach telecom providers. CISA has already flagged 24 Fortinet vulnerabilities as known‑exploited, 13 of which were tied directly to ransomware. That history makes this new FortiClient EMS bug a high‑priority item for organizations relying on Fortinet for endpoint security.

Mitigation tips 

Fortinet recommends upgrading affected FortiClient EMS systems to version 7.4.5 or later to close the CVE‑2026‑21643 vulnerability. Organizations should also review their internet‑exposed EMS interfaces and, where possible, restrict access behind VPNs or firewalls instead of leaving the GUI wide open online. In parallel, IT and security teams should hunt for anomalous database or system‑level activity that might indicate prior exploitation, such as unexpected command execution or lateral movement from the EMS server. Given Fortinet’s track record as a prime target for ransomware actors, patching this flaw quickly and validating exposure can significantly reduce the risk of a major breach.

Infinity Stealer Targets macOS Using ClickFix Trick and Python-Based Malware

 

A newly identified information-stealing malware, dubbed Infinity Stealer, is targeting macOS users through a sophisticated attack chain that blends social engineering with advanced evasion techniques. Security researchers at Malwarebytes report that this is the first known campaign combining the ClickFix technique with a Python-based payload compiled using the Nuitka compiler. The attack begins with a deceptive prompt designed to resemble a legitimate human verification step from Cloudflare. Victims are presented with a fake CAPTCHA and instructed to paste a command into the macOS Terminal to complete the verification. This method, known as ClickFix, tricks users into bypassing built-in operating system protections by executing malicious commands themselves. 

Once the command is executed, it decodes a hidden script that downloads and launches the next stage of the malware. The payload is compiled into a native macOS binary using Nuitka, which converts Python code into C-based executables. This approach makes the malware significantly harder to detect and analyze compared to traditional Python-based threats that rely on bytecode packaging tools. The infection chain unfolds in multiple stages. After the initial script runs, it installs a loader that extracts the final malware payload. Before initiating its malicious activities, the malware performs checks to determine whether it is running in a virtual or sandboxed environment, helping it evade detection by security tools.  

Once active, Infinity Stealer begins harvesting sensitive information from the infected system. This includes login credentials stored in Chromium-based browsers and Firefox, entries from the macOS Keychain, cryptocurrency wallet data, and plaintext secrets found in developer files such as .env configurations. It can also capture screenshots, adding another layer of data collection. The stolen information is then transmitted to attacker-controlled servers via HTTP requests. 

Additionally, notifications are sent through Telegram to alert threat actors when data exfiltration is complete, enabling real-time monitoring of compromised systems. Researchers warn that this campaign highlights the growing sophistication of threats targeting macOS, a platform often perceived as more secure. The use of social engineering combined with advanced compilation techniques demonstrates how attackers are evolving their methods to bypass traditional defenses. Users are strongly advised to avoid executing unknown commands in Terminal, especially those obtained from untrusted sources, as such actions can directly compromise system security.

Malware Hidden in Blockchain Networks Is Quietly Targeting Developers Worldwide



A new investigation has uncovered a cyberattack method that uses blockchain networks to quietly distribute malware, raising concerns among security researchers about how difficult it may be to stop once it spreads further.

The threat first surfaced when a senior engineering executive at Crystal Intelligence received a freelance opportunity through LinkedIn. The message appeared routine, asking him to review and run code hosted on GitHub. However, the request resembled a known tactic used by a North Korean-linked group often referred to as Contagious Interview, which relies on fake job offers to target developers.

Instead of proceeding, the executive examined the code and found something unusual. Hidden within it was the beginning of a multi-step attack designed to look harmless. A developer following normal instructions would likely execute it without noticing anything suspicious.

Once activated, the code connects to blockchain networks such as TRON and Aptos, which are commonly used because of their low transaction costs. These networks do not contain the malware itself but instead store information that directs the program to another blockchain, Binance Smart Chain. From there, the final malicious payload is retrieved and executed.

Researchers say this last stage installs a powerful data-stealing tool known as “Omnistealer.” According to analysts working with Ransom-ISAC, the malware is designed to extract a wide range of sensitive data. It can access more than 60 cryptocurrency wallet extensions, including MetaMask and Coinbase Wallet, as well as over 10 password managers such as LastPass. It also targets major browsers like Chrome and Firefox and can pull data from cloud storage services like Google Drive. This means attackers are not just stealing cryptocurrency, but also login credentials and internal access to company systems.

What initially looked like a simple phishing attempt turned out to be far more layered. By placing parts of the attack inside blockchain transactions, the attackers have created a system that is extremely difficult to dismantle. Data stored on blockchains cannot easily be removed, which means parts of this malware infrastructure could remain accessible for years.

Researchers believe the scale of this operation could grow rapidly. Some have compared its potential reach to the WannaCry ransomware attack, which disrupted hundreds of thousands of systems worldwide. In this case, however, the method is quieter and more flexible, which may allow it to spread further before being detected. At the same time, investigators are still unsure what the attackers ultimately intend to do with the access they gain.

Further analysis has revealed possible links to North Korean cyber actors. Investigators traced parts of the activity to an IP address in Vladivostok, a location that has previously appeared in investigations involving North Korean operations. Research cited by NATO has noted that North Korea expanded its internet routing through Russia several years ago. Additional findings from Trend Micro connect similar infrastructure to earlier campaigns involving fake recruiters.

The number of affected victims is already significant. Researchers estimate that around 300,000 credentials have been exposed so far, although they believe the real figure could be much higher. Impacted organizations include cybersecurity firms, defense contractors, financial companies, and government entities in countries such as the United States and Bangladesh.

The attackers rely heavily on deception to gain access. In some cases, they pose as recruiters and convince developers to run infected code as part of a hiring process. In others, they present themselves as freelance developers and introduce malicious code directly into company systems through platforms like GitHub.

Developers in rapidly growing tech ecosystems appear to be a key focus. India, for example, has seen a surge in new contributors on GitHub and ranks among the top countries for cryptocurrency adoption. Researchers suggest that a combination of high developer activity and economic incentives may make such regions more vulnerable to these tactics.

Initial contact is typically made through platforms such as LinkedIn, Upwork, Telegram, and Discord. Representatives from these platforms have advised users to be cautious, particularly when asked to download files or execute unfamiliar code outside controlled environments.

Not all targeted organizations appear strategically important, which suggests the attackers may be casting a wide net. However, the presence of defense and security-related entities among the victims raises more serious concerns about potential intelligence-gathering objectives.

Security experts say this campaign reflects a broader shift in how attacks are being designed. Instead of relying on a single point of failure, attackers are combining social engineering, publicly accessible code platforms, and decentralized infrastructure. The use of blockchain in particular adds a layer of persistence that traditional security tools are not designed to handle.

As investigations continue, researchers warn that this may only be an early stage of a much larger problem. The combination of hidden delivery methods, long-term persistence, and unclear intent makes this campaign especially difficult to predict and contain.

Cyber Attacks Threatening Global Digital Landscape, Affecting Human Lives


Cyberattack campaigns have increased against critical infrastructure like power grids, healthcare, and energy. 

Cyber warfare and global threat

The global threat landscape has shifted from data theft to threats against human lives. The convergence of Operational Technology (OT) and Information Technology (IT) has increased the attack surface, exposing sectors like public utilities, aviation, and transport to outsider risks. 

According to Gaurav Shukla, cybersecurity expert at Deloitte South Asia, “For the past two years, we observed that cyber threats were not limited only to the IT systems. They were pervading beyond IT systems, and the perpetrators were targeting more of the critical infrastructure.” 

Change in digital landscape

Digital transformation in recent years has increased the attack surface, providing more opportunities for threat actors to compromise critical infrastructure. “

"If you are driving a connected car on a highway at 120 km/h and suddenly find the steering is no longer in your control, you are not going to be worried about how much money is in your bank account. You are worried about the danger to your life,” Shukla added. 

How dangerous can it be?

For instance, an attack on a medical device compromising patient information can be dangerous, whereas a cyber attack on power grids and the transmission sector can result in countrywide blackouts.

Rise in connected devices

The world population of eight billion is currently surrounded by more than 30 billion IoT sensors. This means that, on average, a person is surrounded by more than 3.5 sensors. 

India’s Digital Public Infrastructure

India’s Digital Public Infrastructure, aka India Stack, has become a global benchmark. According to experts, Deloitte has suggested that 24 countries adopt their own framework for the India Stack. Shukla has warned that as DPI reaches beyond identity and payments to include education and healthcare, the convergence points create new threats. DPI accounts for around 80% of India’s digital transactions in January 2026.

Attackers' use of artificial intelligence (AI) increases the speed and scope of their attacks. Thus, ongoing testing against supply chain problems and AI-related risks will be extremely important, he continued.

Cyberwarfare is continuous, demanding ongoing cooperation between businesses, academics, and the government, whereas kinetic wars are time-bound. “Much like you need a language to build a foundation, awareness of cybersecurity and privacy is going to be just as important,” Shukla added. 

Claude Mythos 5: Trillion-Parameter AI Powerhouse Unveiled

 

Anthropic has launched Claude Mythos 5, a groundbreaking AI model boasting 10 trillion parameters, positioning it as a leader in advanced artificial intelligence capabilities. This massive scale enables superior performance in demanding fields like cybersecurity, coding, and academic reasoning, surpassing many competitors in handling complex, high-stakes tasks. 

Alongside it, the mid-tier Capabara model offers efficient versatility, bridging the gap between flagship power and practical deployment, with Anthropic emphasizing a phased rollout for ethical safety. Claude Mythos 5's model excels in precision and adaptability, making it ideal for cybersecurity threat detection and intricate software development where accuracy is paramount. In academic reasoning, it tackles multifaceted problems that require deep logical inference, outpacing previous models in benchmark tests. 

Anthropic's commitment to responsible AI ensures these tools minimize risks like misuse, aligning innovation with accountability in real-world applications. Complementing Anthropic's releases, GLM 5.1 emerges as a key open-source milestone, excelling in instruction-following and multi-step workflows for automation tasks. Though not the fastest, its reliability fosters community-driven innovation, providing accessible alternatives to proprietary systems for developers worldwide. This model democratizes AI progress, enabling collaborative advancements without the barriers of closed ecosystems. 

Google DeepMind's Gemini 3.1 advances real-time multimodal processing for voice and vision, enhancing latency and quality in sectors like healthcare and autonomous systems. OpenAI's revamped Codeex platform introduces plug-in ecosystems with pre-built workflows, streamlining coding and boosting developer productivity. Meanwhile, the ARC AGI 3 Benchmark sets a rigorous standard for agentic reasoning, combating overfitting and driving genuine AI intelligence gains. 

These developments, including Mistral AI’s expressive text-to-speech and Anthropic’s biology-focused Operon, signal AI's transformative potential across industries. From ethical trillion-parameter giants to open benchmarks, they promise efficiency in research, automation, and creative workflows. As AI evolves rapidly, balancing power with safety will shape a future of innovative problem-solving.

Generative AI Expanding Capabilities of Fraud and Social Engineering Attacks


 

In the past, the quiet integration of generative artificial intelligence into financial systems has been framed as a story of optimizing and scaling. However, in the digital banking industry, generative AI is now being rewritten in terms that are much more urgent. 

It is influencing not only the dynamics of fraud, but the way institutions operate as well, forcing them to rethink how they protect themselves as well. Those technologies that once promised frictionless customer experiences as well as operational precision are now being repurposed by malicious actors with unsettling efficiency, allowing deception to take place with unprecedented realism and speed that traditional safeguards are unprepared to handle.

Due to this, fraud is no longer merely an external threat that must be dealt with; it is now an adaptive, intelligence-driven force embedded within the digital ecosystem that requires banks to continuously reevaluate their security posture while maintaining the fragile trust that underpins modern financial transactions. This shift has been accelerated by the rapid maturation of generative artificial intelligence capabilities, which was initially underestimated by even the most experienced security practitioners.

A number of tools, including large language models, were capable of generating passable but largely generic phishing content in the early stages of widespread adoption. However, they were unable to provide contextual precision or psychological nuance required for high impact attacks. Despite long being regarded as a domain characterized by human intuition, reconnaissance, and carefully constructed deception, full automation appears to have remained problematic. Nevertheless, technological advances have sharply increased in recent years.

Modern models have evolved beyond static datasets and now include real-time retrieval of information, while AI agents are becoming increasingly sophisticated and capable of orchestrating a wide variety of workflows, from data aggregation to targeted messages. In light of these developments, the threat landscape has materially changed. 

 A highly personalised attack narrative, previously requiring deliberate human effort to construct, can be built rapidly and scaleably using publicly available digital footprints and behavioral cues. The concept of fully automated, precision-driven social engineering is no longer theoretical in this context.

Instead of representing an emerging operational reality, it represents an emerging operational reality that requires threat actors only to initiate the process, leaving adaptive AI systems to refine and execute campaigns with a level of consistency and reach that significantly increases the frequency and effectiveness of fraud attempts. 

Modern artificial intelligence systems have advanced the analytical and generative capabilities of social engineering, enabling a significant proportion of successful intrusions to be carried out with this tactic. These models are capable of building highly contextualised engagement vectors which reflect the authentic communication patterns of corporations, social media platforms, and professional networks by systematically harvesting and correlating publicly accessible data across corporate websites, social media platforms, and professional networks. 

Consequently, phishing and business email compromise attempts are now more sophisticated than they were before, as they replicate internal correspondence, vendor interactions, and executive directives with a degree of authenticity that challenges conventional scrutiny in both linguistics and situationality. 

By allowing adversaries to seamlessly operate across geographically dispersed organizations, multilingual generation further extends the reach of such campaigns. Moreover, there has been an increase in synthetic media techniques, including voice cloning and artificial intelligence-generated audio, that are increasingly being deployed in real-time impersonation attacks, especially in cases where trust is high, such as financial authorizations and executive communications. 

A new approach to governance frameworks is necessary for enterprises operating in distributed and digitally dependent environments, with a greater emphasis on verification protocols, communication authentication, and continuous monitoring. Parallel to this, it is becoming increasingly difficult for malicious software developers to enter the market. 

In spite of sophisticated threat actors continuing to engineer advanced malware using traditional methods, generative AI provides less experienced adversaries with the ability to interact with the threat landscape. AI-assisted tooling identifies exploitable weaknesses in open-source codebases, generates functional scripts tailored to those vulnerabilities, and iteratively modifies existing payloads to evade signature-based detection. 

While such outputs may not always match the complexity of state-sponsored tooling, they are more effective due to their scalability and speed. Attackers can rapidly test multiple variants against defensive systems and refine their approaches quickly and effectively without the need for extensive technical knowledge. 

The increased iteration cycle contributes to a more volatile threat environment, as it results in a greater variety of attack techniques that are capable of adapting quickly to defensive countermeasures due to the increased diversity of attack techniques. This shift reveals the limitations of traditional security architectures relying primarily on perimeter-based control mechanisms and static prevention systems. 

While firewalls, antivirus solutions, and access controls remain fundamental, they are no longer sufficient to combat automated adversaries that are more adaptive and adaptive. Despite the fact that AI-driven attacks are capable of bypassing rule-based systems, the sheer volume and speed of attempts increase the probability of compromise statistically. 

Organizations are therefore being forced to make detection and response capabilities a core component of their security posture, thus prioritizing them as core components. These include continuous monitoring of endpoints and networks, the use of behavioral analytics to identify deviations from established patterns, and the establishment of workflows for rapid investigation and response to incidents. These measures are essential not only for early threat identification, but also to limit the operational and financial impact of breaches. This development also has a significant economic impact. 

A major factor contributing to scam-related losses is artificial intelligence, which acts as a force multiplier, accelerating the scale and success rate of fraud. Global scam losses are estimated to exceed hundreds of billions annually. AI-enabled scams have increasingly reached execution and completion within a compressed timeframe, often within hours of initial contact, which has reduced the window for detection and intervention. 

Looking forward, the implications go well beyond incremental risk. Incorporating artificial intelligence into cybercriminal operations represents a substantial change in how fraud is conceived, executed, and scaled. With the rapid advancement of attack methodologies, increasing cost-efficiency, and increased autonomy, defensive strategies are unable to keep pace.

In an environment where tactics are evolving in real time, organizations must not only identify isolated threats, but also continually adapt in order to remain competitive. It is becoming increasingly clear that financial institutions are repositioning generative AI as a foundational layer within modern fraud detection architectures as a defensive response to the rapidly changing threat landscape. 

The most significant application of this technology lies in real-time behavioural intelligence, where models are continuously analyzing signals, including typing cadence, navigation patterns, device characteristics, and transactional timing, to establish dynamic baselines for legitimate user activity in real-time. These behavioural signatures can be instantly identified if they depart from them, thus allowing institutions to take action immediately during critical moments, such as digital onboarding or high risk transactions. 

By using such systems in practice, fraud operations have been improved by reducing false positives and improving detection precision, addressing one of the long-standing inefficiencies. When viewed in light of synthetic identity fraud, which has emerged as a persistent and financially material risk across digital channels, this capability becomes particularly relevant. 

Synthetic fraud differs from traditional identity theft by using fabricated and legitimate data to create identities that can be evaded using conventional verification methods. By modeling the lifecycle and behavioral consistency of authentic identities over time,generative AI introduces a more nuanced approach to identifying anomalies that are statistically subtle yet operationally meaningful as they occur. 

Using a near-authentic detection threshold represents a significant departure from rule-based systems, which are often incapable of identifying fraud based on predefined patterns. As a result, transaction monitoring traditionally burdened by excessive alert volumes and limited contextual clarity is undergoing a structural transformation. As a result of these capabilities, cognitive systems are now able to correlate disparate signals into coherent analytical narratives, effectively grouping isolated alerts into fraud scenarios, and prioritizing them based on their inferred impact and risk. 

By shifting from static thresholding to context-aware analysis, detection rates are enhanced as well as the amount of manual work on investigation teams is significantly reduced. Providing institutions with the ability to interpret and explain risk in a structured manner has proven to be critical in environments where speed and accuracy are equally important.

In addition to detection, generative AI is also used to create proactive resilience through large-scale fraud simulations. A stress-testing process involving the generation of synthetic datasets and modelling complex attack scenarios, such as deepfake-enabled payment fraud and coordinated mule account networks, is possible under conditions that closely approximate real-world threats by organizations. 

With the help of simulation environments, security teams are able to identify and refine systemic weaknesses before adversaries exploit them in production systems, thereby shifting from a reactive to an anticipatory defensive posture. Despite this accelerated adoption, the overall fraud landscape continues to deteriorate, underscoring the magnitude of the issue. 

A significant majority of financial institutions have begun utilizing AI-driven tools actively, with adoption rates rapidly increasing in recent years. Nevertheless, fraud losses, particularly those caused by identity abuse, instant payments, and account takeovers, continue to rise, emphasizing the limitations of legacy controls when faced with adaptive adversaries enabled by artificial intelligence. 

As AI enhances defensive capabilities, it simultaneously enhances sophistication and accessibility of attack methodologies, demonstrating a critical inflection point. Generated artificial intelligence is not positioned here as a standalone solution, but rather as a vital component of a future security strategy. Its value lies in enabling systems to continuously learn, to detect anomalies based on greater contextual awareness, and to respond at machine speed when necessary. 

With the interconnectedness of financial ecosystems and the increase in transaction volumes, real-time prediction and neutralization of emerging fraud patterns is becoming increasingly important. To ensure operational integrity and customer trust, organizations need to integrate generative artificial intelligence as a core component of fraud defence as a strategic necessity. 

An increasingly intelligent threat environment makes it a strategic necessity. Managing this rapidly evolving risk environment requires shifting attention from incremental enhancements to deliberate, architecture-level transformation. In order to mitigate fraud, institutions are expected to integrate adaptive intelligence throughout the fraud lifecycle, incorporating advanced analytics into strong governance frameworks, cross-channel visibility, and rapid decision-making processes. 

Human expertise must be paired with machine-driven insights to ensure that automation augments rather than replaces strategic oversight. In order to sustain resilience to increasingly autonomous threats, continuous model validation, adversarial testing, and workforce upskilling will be necessary. Agile, accountable, and real-time responsive organizations will ultimately be in a better position to contain emerging risks in an increasingly AI-mediated financial ecosystem.