The post Ethereum Foundation Set AI Agents Loose on Its Code: Here’s What They Actually Found appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Key Takeaways Ethereum Foundation AI agents uncovered CVE-2026-34219, a remotely-triggerable bug in libp2p’s gossipsub. One agent produced about 1,000 candidate findings, with 86% of top-tier picks surviving expert review. The foundation said July 9 that triage, not bug-finding, is the bottleneck; human validation stays essential. A Lot of Misdiagnosis The experiment was detailed in a blog post published July 9 by Nikos Baxevanis of the foundation’s protocol security team, under a title that doubled as the firm’s thesis, i.e. “The triage is the product.” The findings drew wide attention as the most flagged issues turned out to be false positives (even though there were real bugs in the mix). Ethereum Foundation blog detailing the false positives encountered from its recent tests. The headline discovery is real enough, as the agents helped surface a remotely
The Ethereum Foundation’s protocol security team ran coordinated artificial intelligence (AI) agents against the code Ethereum depends on, surfacing at least one remotely exploitable bug along with a flood of convincing false positives that humans had to untangle. A Lot of Misdiagnosis The experiment was detailed in a blog post published July 9 by Nikos […]
Widespread AI agent security incidents highlight urgent need for improved identity management and increased investment in cybersecurity measures.
The post More than half of enterprises report AI agent security incidents, and most are sharing credentials across bots appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Ethereum Foundation AI Agent Research Shows Where Smart Contracts May Be Heading Next is the kind of crypto story that looks simple at headline level but becomes more useful once you place it inside the wider market backdrop. The important
The post Ethereum Deploys AI Security Agents to Hunt Bugs, Discovers Critical Networking Flaw appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Ethereum Foundation used coordinated AI agents to identify a real protocol vulnerability. Validating AI-generated bug reports now takes more effort than finding vulnerabilities. The Foundation runs multiple AI agents with specialized roles, as per a July 9 blog post. The Ethereum Foundation has revealed that its Protocol Security team is using coordinated AI agents to audit Ethereum’s core infrastructure, finding real software vulnerabilities while adding that human verification remains the most important part of the process. In a technical blog published on July 9, the Foundation said the AI agents are being deployed against systems software, cryptographic libraries and smart contracts that support Ethereum’s protocol. One confirmed discovery was a remotely triggerable panic in libp2p’s Gossipsub networking component, which is used by Ethereum consensus cl
The post Top 11 Telegram trading bots to try in July 2026 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Telegram trading bots are automated programs that are embedded in the Telegram app allowing users to execute trades on decentralized exchanges without using a traditional exchange interface. The bots can buy and sell orders, respond to market conditions automatically and monitor positions. How do Telegram trading bots work? Telegram trading bots are connected to DEXs through smart contracts and a Web3 wallet. Users can create a new wallet inside the bot or import an existing one that can then monitor on-chain activity and execute trades. The bots can also monitor and manage their positions according to the rules defined by the users. Bots can help users navigate DEX interface which is especially useful when trying to buy newly launched tokens. They can also help users detect signs of a rug pull before a trade is executed. Copy trading also helps users mirror trades of a specific wallet addres
The post Ethereum Foundation Turns to AI Agents in Race to Secure Network From Bad Actors appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Key highlights: The Ethereum Foundation has tested AI agents in a cybersecurity role The AI agents found real bugs in the shortest time possible, with the Foundation warning that security researchers are still required Ethereum is now bracing for its biggest network improvements since The Merge The Ethereum Foundation has announced a raft of positives after testing the capabilities of AI agents in spotting security vulnerabilities on the Ethereum network. Despite the successes, the Ethereum Foundation disclosed that AI agents are not replacements for security researchers as the network braces for seismic changes. Ethereum Foundation unleashes AI agents to spot vulnerabilities According to a blog post by the research nonprofit, the experiments with coordinated AI agents for identifying network vulnerabilities recorded impressive success levels. Right off the bat
The post AI Agent Dispute Resolution Powers Internet Court Protocol appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
When AI agents start cutting deals with each other — buying, selling, committing funds without a human ever clicking “approve” — what happens when one of them defaults? That question is now driving a serious infrastructure push, and AI agent dispute resolution just got its first dedicated protocol. A coalition of 27 crypto and Web3 firms, including OKX, MetaMask, Matter Labs, and Genlayer, has launched the Internet Court, a shared framework designed to handle contractual disagreements between autonomous AI agents at the speed they actually operate. Key takeaways The Internet Court is a 27-firm-backed protocol led by the Genlayer Foundation to resolve disputes between AI agents transacting autonomously. Agentic commerce currently has no dispute resolution mechanism, and traditional courts cannot process machine-speed disagreements. The protocol provides interoperable AI-based payment