Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Iran, Oman will start large-scale evacuation of ships through Strait of Hormuz, says IMO

Iran, Oman will start large-scale evacuation of ships through Strait of Hormuz, says IMO

June 25, 2026
E-bike victims sue NYC after Mamdani blocks criminal enforcement against wild riders

E-bike victims sue NYC after Mamdani blocks criminal enforcement against wild riders

June 25, 2026
Lions CB Terrion Arnold arrested on kidnapping, armed robbery charges

Lions CB Terrion Arnold arrested on kidnapping, armed robbery charges

June 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Iran, Oman will start large-scale evacuation of ships through Strait of Hormuz, says IMO
  • E-bike victims sue NYC after Mamdani blocks criminal enforcement against wild riders
  • Lions CB Terrion Arnold arrested on kidnapping, armed robbery charges
  • Inside Maternal Instinct’s Taylor Parker’s Marriage and Dating History: Wade Griffin and More
  • Lakers agree to two-way contract with former Vanderbilt forward AK Okereke
  • Exclusive | Dallas OKs incentive package for $1.3B Morgan Stanley office tower — and far-left election wins in NYC could spark more businesses to leave
  • ‘Squad’ Rep. Rashida Tlaib slammed for defending antifa members who shot Texas officer at immigration facility
  • Senate rejects Democrats’ Iran war powers resolution after Republicans flip
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » AI self-replication hacks ‘no longer purely theoretical,’ study finds —‬ ‪but experts say it’s too soon to panic
AI self-replication hacks ‘no longer purely theoretical,’ study finds —‬ ‪but experts say it’s too soon to panic
Science

AI self-replication hacks ‘no longer purely theoretical,’ study finds —‬ ‪but experts say it’s too soon to panic

News RoomBy News RoomMay 13, 20264 ViewsNo Comments

Artificial intelligence (AI) models can autonomously “replicate” across multiple machines, hacking vulnerable systems, copying their own parameters onto compromised hosts, and launching working replicas capable of continuing the attack, new research shows. However, experts told Live Science the bigger concern is not AI suddenly running wild on its own, but cybercriminals using AI agents to automate known hacking techniques.

Scientists at Palisade Research tested whether AI agents could independently move through a chain of intentionally vulnerable systems without human intervention. In a new study uploaded May 7 to GitHub, large language models (LLMs) could identify exploitable web applications, steal credentials, transfer their own files, and stand up new inference servers capable of continuing the attack from the next machine in the chain.

This is the first research to show an AI model “autonomously exploit a target and replicate itself end-to-end,” the researchers wrote in the study.


You may like

Although that sounds like the premise of a sci-fi disaster movie, experts who weren’t involved in the research said the reality is somewhat less dramatic.

Notably, the systems did not spontaneously decide to reproduce themselves in the wild. Rather, the researchers told the models to replicate, handed them Linux tools and shell access, and pointed them at intentionally vulnerable systems riddled with bugs. These included vulnerabilities open to various attack methods that could expose credentials, bypass logins, or hand over access to other machines.

Jeff Watkins, chief AI officer at consultancy NorthStar Intelligence, said the experiment was closer to automated cyber intrusion than to “machine life.”

“That is more a worm with a planner attached, not consciousness scaling.”

Antoine Casanova-Mazet, head of innovation at HIM Business School

“The headline claim sounds dramatic, but the underlying mechanism is very familiar to anyone who has studied malware in depth,” Watkins told Live Science. “What Palisade appears to have demonstrated is not a magical new form of machine life but rather an agentic system performing a sequence of fairly standard cybersecurity intrusion tasks.”

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

A nervy direction of travel

According to the study, the agent copied onto newly compromised systems its model weights (parameters within a machine learning model that determine the strength of connections between artificial neurons), prompts (inputs instructing the AI) and harnesses (the software infrastructure).

It then verified the replica was functional by checking whether it could respond to inference requests, meaning prompts or queries sent to the AI model to confirm it was running correctly. Researchers also tested “chain replication,” in which the replicated model becomes the attacker in the next stage of the operation.

“The agent exploits a web vulnerability, copies its existing weight file of about 119 gigabytes across via scp or rsync [common Linux file-transfer tools], and loads an inference server on the compromised host,” he said. “That is more a worm with a planner attached, not consciousness scaling,” said Antoine Casanova-Mazet, head of innovation at HIM Business School, where he works on AI adoption and digital transformation projects as well as having built AI systems himself.


What to read next

Still, the researchers argue that the trajectory matters more than the current limitations.

In the study, the researchers said end-to-end replication success rates improved sharply over the past year as frontier AI systems became more capable at coding and autonomous task execution. The study reported that Anthropic’s Claude Opus models achieved success rates above 80% in some scenarios, and OpenAI systems also showed measurable improvements.

The study brings up concerns about the supervision of AI.

(Image credit: Eugene Mymrin/Getty Images)

“What is genuinely new is the trajectory,” Casanova-Mazet said. “Within 12 months, end-to-end success on this pipeline moved from 6% to 81% on Anthropic’s frontier models and from 0% to 33% on OpenAI’s.”

The study lands amid broader concerns about increasingly autonomous agentic AI systems capable of carrying out long chains of tasks with limited supervision. Researchers and safety groups have spent the past year warning that AI models are becoming more capable of offensive cybersecurity operations, vulnerability discovery, persistence and long-horizon planning. For example, in a December 2025 study, scientists in China linked with the cloud giant Alibaba said an experimental AI agent broke out of its testing confines and mined cryptocurrency without permission.

We should worry about other people, not AI

Cybersecurity experts remain skeptical that examples like that highlighted in the new study represent an immediate real-world threat. The biggest practical issue is scale, they said, as modern LLMs are huge. Moving hundreds of gigabytes of weights and infrastructure around a monitored enterprise network would likely generate large amounts of suspicious traffic.

“There are also practical constraints that make this less immediately troubling,” Watkins said. “Replicating a full LLM is not like copying a small worm across a network. The notion that something as powerful as Mythos could self-replicate is not currently feasible, due to the intense resource requirements involved.”

The more immediate worry is not rogue AI systems “roaming the internet,” Watkins said, but attackers using agentic AI to accelerate existing cybercrime operations.

“The more realistic near-term concern is not a frontier model roaming the internet like a digital organism and causing global chaos,” he said. “It is threat actors using agentic AI to accelerate familiar attack chains.”

That divide is becoming increasingly important in AI safety research. Another study, uploaded Sept. 29 2025, to the arXiv preprint database, argued that the ability for an AI agent to copy itself does not automatically make a system dangerous in the real world. Aspects like autonomy, persistence, objectives, and access to tools or networks matter far more than whether the model can technically spin up another copy of itself, those researchers said.

As experts explained, the Palisade study appears less like rogue AI breaking loose and more like a glimpse into how AI-powered hacking tools are evolving.

“This research shows that self-replication is no longer a purely theoretical capability in agentic AI systems,” Watkins told Live Science. “For now, it is probably less urgent than ordinary vulnerability exploitation, ransomware, credential theft and supply-chain compromise, but it is a warning about where those threats are heading as AI agents gain more tools, more autonomy and more operational access.”

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Satellites reveal Earth has a surprising symmetry in the way it reflects light — and it might be tied to the El Niño cycle

Satellites reveal Earth has a surprising symmetry in the way it reflects light — and it might be tied to the El Niño cycle

Water might secretly be a mix of 2 different liquids, scientists say

Water might secretly be a mix of 2 different liquids, scientists say

China’s Einstein Probe detected a mysterious cosmic explosion — and scientists have no idea what caused it

China’s Einstein Probe detected a mysterious cosmic explosion — and scientists have no idea what caused it

‘A weird result from an already weird hominin’: Archaeologists discover all Homo naledi skeletons found in South African cave are female

‘A weird result from an already weird hominin’: Archaeologists discover all Homo naledi skeletons found in South African cave are female

‘Weirdos of the sperm whale world’ appear to be evolving 2 different dialects, audio recordings suggest

‘Weirdos of the sperm whale world’ appear to be evolving 2 different dialects, audio recordings suggest

60 million stars: Euclid space telescope snaps the largest-ever close-up photo of the Milky Way’s crowded heart

60 million stars: Euclid space telescope snaps the largest-ever close-up photo of the Milky Way’s crowded heart

Diagnostic dilemma: After taking a medicine for years, a man suddenly had weird changes in his taste that made food disgusting

Diagnostic dilemma: After taking a medicine for years, a man suddenly had weird changes in his taste that made food disgusting

Drug-induced ‘brain freeze’ may help protect the brain after a stroke, early study suggests

Drug-induced ‘brain freeze’ may help protect the brain after a stroke, early study suggests

‘Unequivocal evidence’ of the age of Earth’s oldest impact crater turns out to be off by half a billion years

‘Unequivocal evidence’ of the age of Earth’s oldest impact crater turns out to be off by half a billion years

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

E-bike victims sue NYC after Mamdani blocks criminal enforcement against wild riders

E-bike victims sue NYC after Mamdani blocks criminal enforcement against wild riders

June 25, 2026
Lions CB Terrion Arnold arrested on kidnapping, armed robbery charges

Lions CB Terrion Arnold arrested on kidnapping, armed robbery charges

June 25, 2026
Inside Maternal Instinct’s Taylor Parker’s Marriage and Dating History: Wade Griffin and More

Inside Maternal Instinct’s Taylor Parker’s Marriage and Dating History: Wade Griffin and More

June 24, 2026
Lakers agree to two-way contract with former Vanderbilt forward AK Okereke

Lakers agree to two-way contract with former Vanderbilt forward AK Okereke

June 24, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Exclusive | Dallas OKs incentive package for .3B Morgan Stanley office tower — and far-left election wins in NYC could spark more businesses to leave

Exclusive | Dallas OKs incentive package for $1.3B Morgan Stanley office tower — and far-left election wins in NYC could spark more businesses to leave

June 24, 2026
‘Squad’ Rep. Rashida Tlaib slammed for defending antifa members who shot Texas officer at immigration facility

‘Squad’ Rep. Rashida Tlaib slammed for defending antifa members who shot Texas officer at immigration facility

June 24, 2026
Senate rejects Democrats’ Iran war powers resolution after Republicans flip

Senate rejects Democrats’ Iran war powers resolution after Republicans flip

June 24, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.