Full Summary
This Wednesday morning, South Korea has become the fourth country to form an AI security alliance with OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT. Both Yonhap News Agency and The Korea Times confirm this partnership, which involves South Korea's AI Safety Institute and OpenAI collaborating on a global framework for evaluating AI security. They will also exchange technical information to develop an AI safety assessment framework specific to the Korean language and social context. OpenAI has similar agreements with AI security labs in the United States, the U.K., and Japan. Meanwhile, companies are rapidly expanding AI security solutions. CrowdStrike, as reported by Cyber Daily and Marketscreener, is integrating its Falcon platform with major AI gateway providers like Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure, extending threat detection across AI applications and models. Cloudflare and Ping Identity are partnering to boost AI security with enterprise-scale identity enforcement at the edge, a move confirmed by Simplywall.st. Databricks plans to acquire Panther, an AI security operations center platform, to enhance its threat detection, Yahoo Finance reports. Here's the thing: The threat landscape is evolving. IT Security Guru states that AI-powered attacks are now the biggest cybersecurity concern for 41% of security professionals surveyed, nearly double the concern for supply chain risk. Cybersecurity consultant Sergey Chubarov, in a talk reported by Virtualization Review, emphasizes that fighting AI threats requires using AI itself, as attackers are moving faster with "cheap, multilingual, and tireless" generative AI. What nobody expected: Anthropic's Claude Mythos frontier AI model can identify and exploit zero-day vulnerabilities across major operating systems and browsers, with access limited to a select group of organizations through Project Glasswing, Computer Weekly reveals. The UK AI Security Institute reports Mythos completed a 32-step simulated corporate attack chain in three out of ten attempts. This surge in AI capabilities and threats means your digital security, from personal data to critical infrastructure, faces unprecedented challenges. Trust decisions can no longer rely solely on what people see or hear in normal business workflows, as deepfakes and AI-generated content become indistinguishable from reality.