NEWSAR
Multi-perspective news intelligence
SRCThe Guardian - World News
LANGEN
LEANCenter-Left
WORDS635
ENT12
MON · 2026-05-11 · 14:43 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0511-75366
News/AI-powered hacking has exploded into ind/AI-powered hacking has exploded into industrial-scale threat…
NSR-2026-0511-75366News Report·EN·National Security

AI-powered hacking has exploded into industrial-scale threat, Google says

Google reports that AI-powered hacking has rapidly escalated into an industrial-scale threat within three months. State-linked actors from China, North Korea, and Russia, along with criminal groups, are reportedly using commercial AI models like Gemini, Claude, and OpenAI tools to enhance the speed, scale, and sophistication of cyberattacks.

Aisha Down and Dan MilmoThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-11 · 14:43 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
AI-powered hacking has exploded into industrial-scale threat, Google says
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
635words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Google reports that AI-powered hacking has rapidly escalated into an industrial-scale threat within three months. State-linked actors from China, North Korea, and Russia, along with criminal groups, are reportedly using commercial AI models like Gemini, Claude, and OpenAI tools to enhance the speed, scale, and sophistication of cyberattacks. This includes refining operations, building better malware, and exploiting vulnerabilities. The report highlights that threat actors are already leveraging AI for these purposes, moving beyond theoretical future risks. Anthropic previously withheld a powerful AI model due to its potential to find zero-day vulnerabilities, underscoring the growing capabilities of AI in cybersecurity, both for offense and defense.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
National Security
Technology
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

AI enables threat actors to increase the speed, scale, and sophistication of their cyberattacks.

quoteJohn Hultquist (Google)
Confidence
0.95
02

AI-powered hacking has rapidly evolved from a nascent problem to an industrial-scale threat in three months.

factualGoogle
Confidence
0.90
03

Criminal groups and state-linked actors from China, North Korea, and Russia are using commercial AI models for attacks.

factualGoogle
Confidence
0.85
04

Anthropic's Mythos model found zero-day vulnerabilities in every major operating system and web browser.

factualAnthropic
Confidence
0.80
05

The old way of discovering bugs is gone, and bug discovery will now be LLM-assisted.

quoteSteven Murdoch (University College London)
Confidence
0.75
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 635 words
In just three months, AI-powered hacking has gone from a nascent problem to an industrial-scale threat, according to a report from Google.The findings from Google’s threat intelligence group add to an intensifying, global discussion about how the newest AI models are extremely adept at coding – and becoming extremely powerful tools for exploiting vulnerabilities in a broad array of software systems.It finds that criminal groups, as well as state-linked actors from China, North Korea and Russia, appear to be widely using commercial models – including Gemini, Claude and tools from OpenAI – to refine and scale up attacks.“There’s a misconception that the AI vulnerability race is imminent. The reality is that it’s already begun,” said John Hultquist, the group’s chief analyst.“Threat actors are using AI to boost the speed, scale, and sophistication of their attacks. It enables them to test their operations, persist against targets, build better malware and make many other improvements.”Last month, the AI company Anthropic declined to release one of its newest models, Mythos, after asserting that it had extremely powerful capabilities and posed a threat to governments, financial institutions and the world generally if it fell into the wrong hands.Specifically, Anthropic said Mythos had found zero-day vulnerabilities in “every major operating system and every major web browser” – the term for a flaw in a product previously unknown to its developers.The company said these discoveries necessitated “substantial coordinated defensive action across the industry”.Google’s report found, however, that a criminal group recently was on the verge of leveraging a zero-day vulnerability to conduct a “mass exploitation” campaign – and that this group appeared to be using an AI large language model (LLM) that was not Mythos.The report also found that groups were “experimenting” with OpenClaw, an AI tool that went viral in February for offering its users the ability to hand over large chunks of their lives to an AI agent with no guardrails and an unfortunate tendency to mass-delete email inboxes.Steven Murdoch, a professor of security engineering at University College London, said AI tool could help the defensive side in cybersecurity – as well as the hackers.“That’s why I’m not panicking. In general we have reached a stage where the old way of discovering bugs is gone, and it will now all be LLM-assisted. It will take a little while before the consequences of this get shaken out,” he said.However, if AI is helping ambitious hackers to reach their productivity goals, doubts remain as to whether it is bolstering the broader economy.The Ada Lovelace Institute (ALI), an independent AI research body, has cautioned against assumptions of a multibillion-pound public sector productivity boost from AI. The UK government has estimated a £45bn gain in savings and productivity benefits from public sector investment in digital tools and AI.In a report published on Monday, the ALI said most studies of AI-related increases in productivity referred to time savings or cost reductions, but did not look at outcomes such as better services or improved worker-wellbeing.Other problematic aspects of such research include: whether projections of AI-related efficiency in a workplace really succeed in the real world; headline figures obscuring varying results for using AI in different tasks; and failing to account for the impact on public sector employment and service delivery.“The productivity estimates shaping major government decisions about AI sometimes rest on untested assumptions and rely on methodologies whose limitations are not always appreciated by those using figures in the wild,” said the ALI report.“The result is a gap between the confidence with which productivity claims are presented and the strength of the evidence behind them.”The report’s recommendations include: encouraging future studies to reflect uncertainty over the impact of the technology; ensuring government departments measure the impact of AI programmes “from the start”; and supporting longer-term studies that measure productivity gains over years rather than weeks.
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
ai-powered hacking
1.00
industrial-scale threat
0.90
cybersecurity
0.80
vulnerabilities
0.70
zero-day vulnerabilities
0.70
large language models
0.60
threat actors
0.50
malware
0.40
google
0.40
anthropic
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

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