Big companies have an expensive new addiction to AI, and their smack is getting more expensive. Who could have seen this coming? From the WSJ:
"Use of artificial intelligence by big companies is exploding—and the soaring cost has some of them pumping the brakes in a way that could complicate AI’s triumphal march across the economy.
Executives across industries this year have urged employees to integrate AI tools into their work, spending freely to encourage experimentation and seeking to send a message to Wall Street that their companies won’t be left behind in a coming wave of disruption."
"All that enthusiasm has resulted in skyrocketing costs for so-called tokens, the basic unit of measurement for AI computing, as AI model providers seek to balance supply and demand and manage their own costs. Some enterprises have hit their annual budget in just three months or reported seeing their AI spending bills double or triple."
"Now corporate leaders are scrambling to bring down expenses by finding ways to ration AI use in their organizations, steer workers toward cheaper, homegrown tools and help them hone their skills to improve returns."
https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/corporate-america-is-starting-to-ration-ai-as-cost-skyrockets-1eb99d7a (paywall)
This person has been a prolific bug finder for quite some time. Here's their public HackerOne profile: https://hackerone.com/halove23/hacktivity?type=user
Reading their Xitter timeline over the years is pretty interesting. They went from working w/ a lot of these bug bounty programs and giving MS time to fix stuff beyond the usual 90-day window to increasing frustration in dealing w/ vendors. I wish that were less of a common experience than it still is today, but some dynamics in this industry never seem to change.
Also just noticed something interesting. Back in 2019, MS was including hyperlinks to researchers in their advisories. In this advisory, they actually link to the researcher's shitposting Facebook profile, which has posts up until this month.
https://www.facebook.com/com.android.vending
https://msrc.microsoft.com/update-guide/en-US/advisory/CVE-2019-1385
It's worth catching one of the Pwn2Own OG's (Aaron Portnoy) on the latest Three Buddy Problem
Aaron with the timeless advice "level up.. get better"
(Also with props for Deception in Defense 💪💚)
Offensivecon's talks are now available on our YouTube channel!
🔗 https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLYvhPWR_XYJkIP2X-uGDsAMIKnhdSauaM
Submissions are still open!
If you've been sitting on a bug, technique, war story, weird research rabbit hole, or beautifully cursed idea: now is the time.
Write something worth archiving.
Phrack CFP closes June 30.
More details on how to submit at https://phrack.org/news
The openSUSE peeps have figured out some crazy compression, it seems. 107.0 B for everything!
📅 Next Web Talks at Mozilla Berlin Meetup is happening Thu, June 11, 18:00 🦊
Two talks:
• Sunil Mayya on "Keep Off My LAN": Firefox's implementation of Local Network Access
• @freddy on "The Devil is in the Defaults": defending against XSS with Trusted Types and the Sanitizer API
https://www.meetup.com/de-DE/berlin-mozilla-meetup/events/314623241/
RE: https://infosec.exchange/@x41sec/116651028731076045
Important! Using a reverse proxy might not fully protect you from BadHost / CVE-2026-48710 **also this does not only affect AI related infrastructure because FastAPI is also affected and used for various applications!**
Pasting a huge AI generated explanation to a problem in an issue or pull-request is nothing but RUDE. Don't do it. You look stupid and the receivers of that feel insulted.
We are humans. We communicate like humans. Fine, use the tools you like, but don't insult us.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyup-362r1w
Respect, at that age such a great #punkrock song and then such current lyrics!
Well done, guys!