How The Terrorist Group Boko Haram Uses Frontier AI

Investigations reveal Boko Haram leveraging advanced frontier AI to enhance operations, raising security concerns across the region.

Secret Claude tracker shocks users after Anthropic’s anti-surveillance stance

A hidden tracker monitoring Claude AI usage has been uncovered, conflicting with Anthropic’s public anti-surveillance policies and raising privacy concerns.

Kill-Switch-Proof: How to Build So Washington Can’t Take Your AI Stack Down

Exploring strategies to prevent government shutdowns of AI models through architecture and dependency management, ensuring operational resilience.

Kill-Switch-Proof: How To Build So Washington Can’t Take Your AI Stack Down

Learn how organizations can architect AI stacks resilient to government shutdowns by controlling dependencies and infrastructure.

The Switch: You Never Owned the AI You Depend On

Recent events reveal governments and companies can abruptly disable AI models, exposing dependency risks. This raises urgent questions about AI ownership and control.

The Switch: You Never Owned the AI You Depend On

Major AI models like Anthropic’s Fable 5 and Mythos 5 were forcibly disabled by U.S. export controls, exposing the fragile dependency on API access.

Your Coding Agent Is an Attack Surface: The Claude Code Security Reckoning

Recent vulnerabilities in Claude Code reveal critical attack surfaces through local configs, MCP integrations, and repository hooks, risking token theft and code execution.

The Frameworks Can’t See the Thing That Matters: A Year of AI-Enabled Cyber Threats

A new report reveals AI’s role in making cyber attackers more dangerous and blurring traditional threat assessment methods in 2026.

Cybersecurity operations signal monitor: A backdoor in a LinkedIn job offer

Cybersecurity operations signal monitor identifies a backdoor in a LinkedIn job offer, raising concerns about targeted cyber threats and organizational security.

Three Public Vulnerabilities. Chained.

A chain of three publicly documented vulnerabilities enabled a sophisticated supply-chain attack on TanStack npm packages on May 11, 2026, exploiting public research and trust boundaries.