Not sure this will matter in the end, but it’s a positive move:

Microsoft is accusing three individuals of running a “hacking-as-a-service” scheme that was designed to allow the creation of harmful and illicit content using the company’s platform for AI-generated content.

The foreign-based defendants developed tools specifically designed to bypass safety guardrails Microsoft has erected to prevent the creation of harmful content through its generative AI services, said Steven Masada, the assistant general counsel for Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit. They then compromised the legitimate accounts of paying customers. They combined those two things to create a fee-based platform people could use.

It was a sophisticated scheme:

The service contained a proxy server that relayed traffic between its customers and the servers providing Microsoft’s AI services, the suit alleged. Among other things, the proxy service used undocumented Microsoft network application programming interfaces (APIs) to communicate with the company’s Azure computers. The resulting requests were designed to mimic legitimate Azure OpenAPI Service API requests and used compromised API keys to authenticate them.

Slashdot thread.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Explore More

Android warns of Qualcomm exploit in latest security bulletin

November 5, 2024 0 Comments 0 tags

Android’s monthly security bulletin published Monday warns of two vulnerabilities with “limited, targeted exploitation” in the wild. One vulnerability impacts Qualcomm chipsets via a use-after-free vulnerability in its FastRPC driver.

FBI joint operation takes down massive Chinese botnet, Wray says

September 18, 2024 0 Comments 0 tags

The FBI conducted a joint operation last week to take down a massive Chinese state-sponsored botnet that the attackers used to compromise hundreds of thousands of devices, target U.S. and

Microsoft rolls back ‘dumbest cybersecurity move in a decade’

June 7, 2024 0 Comments 0 tags

Microsoft on Friday said that it would make major changes to a recently announced AI product that relied on screenshots of users’ screens to make a searchable log of past