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submitted 3 days ago by nobody_1677@lemmy.world to c/linux@lemmy.ml
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[-] rudyharrelson@lemmy.radio 31 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

This fluff piece has quite the pie-in-the-sky attitude toward the blue-teaming applications of AI.

Some commentators predict that future AI models will unearth entirely new forms of vulnerabilities that defy our current comprehension, but we don’t think so.

How reassuring.

The defects are finite, and we are entering a world where we can finally find them all.

Could've said the same thing when enterprise anti-malware came onto the scene decades ago, but the reality was it was just another vector for the arms race between the red team and the blue team. The author seems to put a lot of stock in the whole "the blue team has access to these AI tools that the red team doesn't currently have access to" argument, which kinda ignores the fact that that reality is simply not going to last.

I could be wrong, but any article suggesting "zero-days are numbered" doesn't pass the smell test.

[-] benjirenji@slrpnk.net 0 points 2 days ago

I agree that 0-days aren't numbered. There are so many layers on which tech can be exploited that this is a difficult claim to make.

On the other hand, there are two different kind of exploits: clear holes in the logic, a situation or code path not considered by the coder. And the much harder to catch extremely creative ways to make a program do things it was never designed to do.

I have not seen LLMs doing creative things ever, so I doubt it would catch this second category. But sure, catching some logic holes it can be helpful with.

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this post was submitted on 21 Apr 2026
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