OpenBSD
6 mentions across all digests
OpenBSD is a free, open-source Unix-like operating system known for security and correctness, which was the subject of a 27-year-old privilege escalation vulnerability discovered autonomously by Claude Mythos Preview, and a target for an AI-generated ext4 filesystem implementation.
The AI that found 27-year-old vulnerabilities no human ever caught before just forced an emergency meeting with every major Wall Street CEO
Anthropic's Claude Mythos discovers vulnerabilities from a decade or more ago—including OpenBSD flaws—triggering the first federal-level regulatory response targeting an AI model's cybersecurity capabilities.
Project Glasswing: Securing critical software for the AI era
Claude Mythos autonomously discovered thousands of zero-day vulnerabilities—including exploits for a 27-year-old OpenBSD flaw and 16-year-old FFmpeg bug—marking a significant leap in AI-powered vulnerability research and infrastructure security.
We Reproduced Anthropic's Mythos Findings with Public Models
Vidoc Security reproduced Anthropic's Mythos vulnerability-discovery findings with public models (GPT-5.4 and Claude Opus 4.6), demonstrating that frontier AI security research capabilities are democratizing beyond internal labs.
AI cybersecurity is not proof of work
AI-driven vulnerability discovery requires superior model intelligence, not computational scale—only more capable models can find complex bugs like OpenBSD SACK, making model quality the competitive moat.
Vibe-coded ext4 for OpenBSD
OpenBSD ext4 filesystem implementation generated via ChatGPT and Claude Code—without touching Linux source—exposes licensing gaps as LLMs become vehicles for copyleft circumvention.