Researchers at the University of Toronto have built a worm that thinks for itself. Using free off-the-shelf AI models it works out how to break into each new computer it encounters, and hijacks the powerful ones to host its own AI brain. And then the researchers discovered their creation had quietly...
**Source : Graham Cluley | 10 juin 2026**
Researchers at the University of Toronto have built a worm that thinks for itself. Using free off-the-shelf AI models it works out how to break into each new computer it encounters, and hijacks the powerful ones to host its own AI brain. And then the researchers discovered their creation had quietly removed the list of machines it wasn't supposed to attack.
Meanwhile, Meta's shiny new AI customer...
👉 **Lire l'article complet sur Graham Cluley :** [https://grahamcluley.com/smashing-security-podcast-471/](https://grahamcluley.com/smashing-security-podcast-471/)
Researchers at the University of Toronto have built a worm that thinks for itself. Using free off-the-shelf AI models it works out how to break into each new computer it encounters, and hijacks the powerful ones to host its own AI brain. And then the researchers discovered their creation had quietly removed the list of machines it wasn't supposed to attack.
Meanwhile, Meta's shiny new AI customer...
👉 **Lire l'article complet sur Graham Cluley :** [https://grahamcluley.com/smashing-security-podcast-471/](https://grahamcluley.com/smashing-security-podcast-471/)
Commentaires (0)
Laisser un commentaire
Aucun commentaire pour le moment. Soyez le premier à commenter !