Intelligence agencies warn AI models could launch crippling cyberattacks in months
The intelligence alliance said cyber risk assumptions can become outdated in months and urged governments and businesses to harden defenses quickly.
- On Monday, the Five Eyes intelligence alliance warned that advanced AI models could outpace existing cybersecurity defenses within months, spanning the United States, Britain, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand.
- In June, United States President Donald Trump blocked foreign nationals from accessing Anthropic models, prompting the company to suspend Mythos 5 and Fable 5 to comply with a national security order.
- The Five Eyes advisory warned that AI "lowers barriers for malicious actors and increases the speed and complexity of attacks," noting it simultaneously accelerates threat sophistication despite improving cyber defense capabilities.
- Agencies urged leaders to integrate AI tools into security operations, update legacy systems, and limit critical infrastructure access to prevent escalation into major operational or financial crises.
- Organizations failing to adapt to frontier AI models face growing operational and strategic disadvantages, even as the White House pushed to loosen AI oversight and block states from writing their own rules.
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US, UK, Canada, Australia, & New Zealand Warn AI Is Accelerating Cyberattacks Faster Than the Industry Expects
Already a subscriber? Make sure to log into your account before viewing this content. You can access your account by hitting the “login” button on the top right corner. Still unable to see the content after signing in? Make sure your card on file is up-to-date. The Five Eyes intelligence alliance has warned that frontier AI models could dramatically transform cyberattacks within months, not years. Some shit you should know before you d…
Five Eyes cybersecurity agencies warn of new AI models impact on cyber risks
Cutting-edge artificial intelligence technology is poised to supercharge offensive hacking capabilities, and urgent action is needed to face up to the threat, U.S., British, Canadian, Australian and New Zealand cybersecurity agency officials said on Monday.
The Group of Five cautions against the risks posed by new models of artificial intelligence that enhance piracy capabilities.
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