The post AI Is Now Both the Weapon and the Shield in Crypto’s Fraud War appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Artificial intelligence (AI) has become both the most effective weapon and the strongest shield in cryptocurrency fraud. The cost of running a crypto scam keeps tumbling as AI accelerates the trend. However, exchanges are turning to the same technology to strengthen their defenses. Inside the AI vs AI Arms Race Reshaping Crypto Security Binance Research recently highlighted that AI tools exploit smart contracts about twice as efficiently as they detect vulnerabilities. Attacks cost as little as $1.22 per contract, down 22% month-on-month, with advanced models succeeding 72.2% of the time. “The barrier to entry for scam perpetrators is falling fast, with AI accelerating the drop. What once required technical expertise can now be executed for next to nothing and at scale,” Binance noted. Follow us on X to get the latest news as it happens The problem extends beyond code. Chainalys
DOGEBALL leads presale watchlists as crypto investors seek early-stage opportunities in 2026. Fresh presale momentum is one of the biggest signals crypto buyers watch before a token hits exchanges, and that is exactly why the top crypto presale to buy…
OpenAI has unveiled Daybreak, its answer to Anthropic’s Claude Mythos, amid a growing market for frontier AI-powered cyber defense platforms. The initiative combines OpenAI’s large language models, Codex’s agentic capabilities, and integrations with the broader enterprise security ecosystem.
The company said Daybreak is focused on accelerating cyber defense operations and enabling organizations to secure software across the development lifecycle continuously.
Announcing the initiative on X, Sam Altman, CEO at OpenAI, said, “OpenAI is launching Daybreak, our effort to accelerate cyber defense and continuously secure software. AI is already good and about to get super good at cybersecurity; we’d like to start working with as many companies as possible now to help them continuously secure themselves.”
Daybreak takes on Mythos
The surge in AI-driven cyber threats has recently shifted the AI race toward AI cybersecurity models. In April this year, Anthropic unveiled Project Glasswing, built
The controversy highlights the potential for AI misuse in political discourse, exacerbating tensions and influencing public perception.
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MARA's strategic pivot towards AI and energy infrastructure highlights a shift in leveraging digital assets for diversified growth and stability.
The post MARA sells 20,880 Bitcoin for $1.5 billion in Q1 as firm doubles down on AI appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Transaction Management company DealCloser has struck a deal with Thomson Reuters that brings CoCounsel Legal’s AI document review capability into its deal platform. DealCloser, which ...
Delivering much information about the scale of what’s coming, documentary also follows Gawdat’s campaign to get the programs with empathy
Another day, another warning about AI; vis-a-vis the reality we all know, this has roughly the same reassuring effect as a plane fuselage ripping off mid-flight. Starting off with familiar criticisms, such as putting the world out of work and handing over power to tech barons, Alex Holmes and Lina Zilinskaite’s film blasts an concentrated stream of AI concerns in its 83-minute runtime. By the time it is talking about current efforts to create computers out of human brain cells, potentially integrable into our own craniums, and implying this might be a good thing, it is (ironically) hard to know how to process all of this.
The Cassandra at the film’s centre is Mo Gawdat, former chief business officer at Google X, now a touring cautionary voice trying to get the world to listen about the perils of AI. Once overseeing advanced projects for the tech gian