2 episodes taggedApproximate match across all podcasts
Home/Tags/UPDATE AUTHENTICATION

UPDATE AUTHENTICATION

All podcast episode summaries matching UPDATE AUTHENTICATION — aggregated across every podcast we track.

2 episodes ¡ Page 1/1

Quotes & Clips tagged UPDATE AUTHENTICATION

14 on this page

Current AI defenses mirror the global Y2K effort

“In cybersecurity, we always talk about the awful things, the ransomware outbreaks and hacks and things like that. But occasionally, we do something right collectively. And Y2K was an example of when the world knew about a problem and worked really hard and averted disaster. The Y2K lesson is to take threats seriously as early as possible.”

— Robert McMillan

Anthropic restricted Mythos access to fifty select companies

“We only want to release it to a select group of entities. So they picked about 50 corporations and organizations and said, take a look at this, see what you can do with it. The idea is that access to mythos could give those companies a head start against bugmageddon, allowing them to find the holes in their systems and patch them before hackers get their hands on mythos.”

— Robert McMillan

Hackers now exploit vulnerabilities within 24 hours

“Eight years ago, the average time between a bug being found and a hacker using that bug in a cyber attack was 847 days. So a bug would be disclosed, two years would go by, and then it would start getting exploited on average. Now it's like within a day. It's not rocket science, but it takes time for a human to do it. You have to have a certain level of expertise. AI has absorbed all of that.”

— Robert McMillan

AI-generated software creates entirely new hacking risks

“We're rolling out all kinds of AI-created software and AI systems and agentic systems and things like that, and people are going to start hacking all of that. So that actually might be a bigger worry than all these bugs in existing software that AI is finding. That's really the thing that I would kind of worry about is like, what is the unexpected consequence of all of these systems rolling out?”

— Robert McMillan

Anthropic restricted Mythos access to fifty select companies

“We only want to release it to a select group of entities. So they picked about 50 corporations and organizations and said, take a look at this, see what you can do with it. The idea is that access to mythos could give those companies a head start against bugmageddon, allowing them to find the holes in their systems and patch them before hackers get their hands on mythos.”

— Robert McMillan

Hackers now exploit vulnerabilities within 24 hours

“Eight years ago, the average time between a bug being found and a hacker using that bug in a cyber attack was 847 days. So a bug would be disclosed, two years would go by, and then it would start getting exploited on average. Now it's like within a day. It's not rocket science, but it takes time for a human to do it. You have to have a certain level of expertise. AI has absorbed all of that.”

— Robert McMillan

AI-driven bug discovery triggers a global Bugmageddon

“AI models are getting very good at finding security vulnerabilities. The amount of bugs that are being found right now is skyrocketing, and people are freaking out because of that. Mythos has become the poster child for a phenomenon that people in the cybersecurity industry have been talking about for months... the geeks call it the vulnerability Armageddon, but here at The Journal, we call it the bugmageddon.”

— Robert McMillan

Anthropic AI discovered a 27-year-old software bug

“They said, find us some bugs, and it found this bug. A guy named Niels Provos had written some code in 1998 and he made a mistake. Nobody noticed that mistake for over 27 years until Mythos took a shot at it. The bug Mythos found could have caused a serious problem, and it had sat there undetected by humans for nearly 30 years.”

— Robert McMillan

Current AI defenses mirror the global Y2K effort

“In cybersecurity, we always talk about the awful things, the ransomware outbreaks and hacks and things like that. But occasionally, we do something right collectively. And Y2K was an example of when the world knew about a problem and worked really hard and averted disaster. The Y2K lesson is to take threats seriously as early as possible.”

— Robert McMillan

Anthropic AI discovered a 27-year-old software bug

“They said, find us some bugs, and it found this bug. A guy named Niels Provos had written some code in 1998 and he made a mistake. Nobody noticed that mistake for over 27 years until Mythos took a shot at it. The bug Mythos found could have caused a serious problem, and it had sat there undetected by humans for nearly 30 years.”

— Robert McMillan

AI-generated software creates entirely new hacking risks

“We're rolling out all kinds of AI-created software and AI systems and agentic systems and things like that, and people are going to start hacking all of that. So that actually might be a bigger worry than all these bugs in existing software that AI is finding. That's really the thing that I would kind of worry about is like, what is the unexpected consequence of all of these systems rolling out?”

— Robert McMillan

AI-driven bug discovery triggers a global Bugmageddon

“AI models are getting very good at finding security vulnerabilities. The amount of bugs that are being found right now is skyrocketing, and people are freaking out because of that. Mythos has become the poster child for a phenomenon that people in the cybersecurity industry have been talking about for months... the geeks call it the vulnerability Armageddon, but here at The Journal, we call it the bugmageddon.”

— Robert McMillan

More clips tagged UPDATE AUTHENTICATION?

Get a daily email of the best quotes & audio clips from the top podcasts.

Subscribe for daily Quicklets