Subj : Weaponized AI is making h
To   : All
From : Mike Powell
Date : Tue Aug 05 2025 09:08 am

Weaponized AI is making hackers faster, more aggressive, and more successful

Date:
Mon, 04 Aug 2025 14:13:00 +0000

Description:
Hackers are using generative AI to improve the speed and quality of their
attacks, while simultaneously attacking enterprise AI.

FULL STORY

New research from CrowdStrike confirms that hackers are exploiting AI to help
them deliver more aggressive attacks in less time, with the tech also
democratizing lesser-skilled hackers to more advanced code.

However, besides this, they're also exploiting the same AI systems that are
being used by enterprises  according to CrowdStrike, hackers are targeting
the tools used to build AI agents, allowing them to gain access, steal
credentials, and deploy malware.

CrowdStrike is most worried about agentic AI systems, suggesting that they've
now become a "core part of the enterprise attack surface."

Attackers are honing in on enterprise AI

The security company says it observed "multiple" hackers exploiting
vulnerabilities in the tools used to build AI agents, which marks a major
shift from patterns of old. Until now, humans have almost always been the
primary entry point into a company, but now, CrowdStrike is worried that
"autonomous workflows and non-human identities [are] the next frontier of
adversary exploitation."

"Were seeing threat actors use GenAI to scale social engineering, accelerate
operations, and lower the barrier to entry for hands-on-keyboard intrusions,"
Head of Counter Adversary Operations Adam Meyers explained.

Funklocker and SparkCat are two examples of GenAI-built malware in the real
world, while DPRK-nexus Famous Chollima has also been observed using
generative AI to automate its insider attack program across all phases.
Scattered Spider, a group believed to consist of UK and US nationals, even
managed to deploy ransomware within 24 hours of accessing systems.

"Adversaries are treating these agents like infrastructure, attacking them
the same way they target SaaS platforms, cloud consoles, and privileged
accounts," Meyers added.

Still, even though technologies like AI are playing an increasing role in
speeding up attacks, CrowdStrike found that four in five (81%) interactive
intrusions were malware-free  relying on human hands on keyboards to stay
undetected.

======================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/weaponized-ai-is-making-hackers-faster-
more-aggressive-and-more-successful

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