AI-generated cybercrime is rapidly expanding, accelerated by the launch of several new tools on the darkweb beyond the discovery of WormGPT last month, according to a new report released on Tuesday by cybersecurity firm SlashNext.
WormGPT and FraudGPT, released a week later, are just the tip of the iceberg in developing artificial intelligence tools that cybercriminals aim to employ against victims, SlashNext concludes. FraudGPT alone was built with the ability to create phishing scam web pages, write malicious code, create hacking tools, and write scam letters.
SlashNext researchers said they engaged a pseudonymous individual named CanadianKingpin12 via Telegram.
“During our investigation, we took on the role of a potential buyer to dig deeper into CanadianKingpin12 and their product, FraudGPT,” SlashNext said. “Our main objective was to assess whether FraudGPT outperformed WormGPT in terms of technological capabilities and effectiveness.”
The team got more than it bargained for as the seller—while showing off FraudGPT—said new AI chatbots called DarkBart and DarkBert are coming. Those chatbots, CanadianKingpin12 claimed, will have internet access and can integrate with Google’s image recognition technology, Google Lens, which would allo
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Author: Jason Nelson
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