Intelligence agencies from the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand jointly warned that advanced AI models have developed offensive and defensive capabilities faster than expected, posing an imminent threat to cybersecurity. The alliance cautioned that cyberattacks could be dramatically accelerated by frontier AI models in the coming months, marking a shift in how the threat landscape must be understood beyond traditional cybersecurity frameworks.
US intelligence officials and international partners have issued a stark warning that artificial intelligence could circumvent critical cybersecurity defenses protecting government and corporate systems in a matter of months. The assessment underscores growing concerns that AI capabilities are advancing faster than defensive measures can adapt, creating a significant national security vulnerability. Intelligence agencies are urging accelerated development of AI-resistant security protocols and enhanced threat monitoring.
Intelligence agencies from the Five Eyes alliance—comprising the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand—warn that artificial intelligence systems are advancing rapidly enough to compromise current cybersecurity protections in months rather than years. The assessment suggests organizations face an accelerated timeline to upgrade defensive measures against AI-powered attacks. The warning underscores growing concern among government security experts about the pace of AI development outstripping defensive capabilities.
Intelligence officials from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand issued a rare joint statement warning that advanced AI models could be weaponized for large-scale cyberattacks against governments and businesses within months. The Five Eyes alliance expressed concern that current AI capabilities are approaching a threshold where they could be used to orchestrate sophisticated attacks on critical infrastructure and sensitive systems.
Federal regulators will investigate a fatal Tesla crash in Texas where the vehicle's driver-assistance system was engaged at the time of the accident. The incident raises questions about the safety and limitations of Tesla's autonomous driving features.
A UK court has greenlit a class action lawsuit that could entitle millions of iCloud users to compensation from Apple, with potential damages reaching £3 billion. Apple disputes claims that its iCloud practices are anti-competitive, arguing that customers have access to competing third-party cloud storage solutions.
Google DeepMind and entertainment studio A24 have announced a collaboration to develop artificial intelligence tools for filmmaking, backed by a $75 million investment. The partnership aims to create AI-powered solutions that could transform creative production workflows in the entertainment industry.
Garfield AI, an artificial intelligence legal firm, has won a trial in an English court in what appears to be the first courtroom victory using an AI lawyer. An HR consultant paid the firm approximately £400 to pursue a £7,000 unpaid debt claim, with a barrister noting that advocacy at trial "remained fundamentally human" despite the AI-generated materials.
BP, Marathon Petroleum, 7-Eleven, and Walmart are being sued for allegedly using artificial intelligence algorithms to artificially inflate gasoline prices in California. The lawsuit suggests the companies coordinated pricing strategies through AI systems to reduce competition and boost profits at consumers' expense.
A new open-source infrastructure called Darwin Mobile Agent aims to create autonomous reinforcement learning agents that can interact with mobile interfaces and evolve without human guidance. The framework uses parallel cloud-phone instances to overcome data-collection bottlenecks and proposes a roadmap to systematically remove human priors from task design, outcome verification, and memory management. Researchers validate that the system provides the stability needed for policy optimization in GUI environments.
A new arXiv paper argues that large language models suffer from "rational value risk"—a gap between their deployed reasoning and theoretically optimal decision-making—even when successfully aligned to human values during training. Testing Llama, Qwen, Tulu, GPT, and DeepSeek models across math and reasoning benchmarks, researchers found this irrationality is widespread, cannot be fully eliminated through alignment alone, and improves only incrementally with longer reasoning chains.