Artificial intelligence is becoming smarter and more powerful every day. But sometimes, instead of solving problems properly, AI models find shortcuts to succeed. This behavior is called reward ...
Think your Wi-Fi is safe? Your coding tools? Or even your favorite financial apps? This week proves again how hackers, companies, and governments are all locked in a nonstop race to outsmart each ...
Anthropic ran the tests only in simulated blockchain environments to safely measure how much real value AI-driven smart contract exploits could cause in the real world. Anthropic has shown that ...
A Korean expert says the Upbit breach likely stemmed from a high-level mathematical exploit involving biased nonces. Analysis suggests attackers inferred private keys by detecting subtle randomness ...
North Korean hacking group Lazarus is suspected of being behind an exploit that saw 45 billion won (about $30 million) drained from South Korea’s largest crypto exchange Upbit on Thursday, Yonhap News ...
SEOUL, Nov 28 (Reuters) - South Korea suspects a North Korean team may be behind the recent hacking of cryptocurrency exchange Upbit that led to the unauthorised withdrawal of 44.5 billion won ($30.4 ...
Upbit’s latest hack comes six years after a 2019 breach that South Korea linked to North Korean hackers, who stole ETH now worth more than $1b. South Korea’s largest crypto exchange Upbit has revealed ...
Hackers stole a trove of data from a company used by major Wall Street banks for real-estate loans and mortgages, setting off a scramble to determine what was taken and which banks were affected, ...
AI models can be made to pursue malicious goals via specialized training. Teaching AI models about reward hacking can lead to other bad actions. A deeper problem may be the issue of AI personas.