BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  'No one asked them to': S
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 18 Mar 2026 18:26:44 -0500
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 [This actually makes me wonder about the honesty of the persons who were
tasked with setting these AI agents up to begin with. -- Mike]

'No one asked them to': Security experts warn malicious AI agents can team up
to launch cyberattacks

Date:
Tue, 17 Mar 2026 22:05:00 +0000

Description:
AI agents which perform normal office tasks can also autonomously exploit
systems, bypass protections, and exfiltrate sensitive data inside simulated
networks.

FULL STORY
AI agents independently discovered vulnerabilities and exploited them while
performing routine tasks
Multi-agent systems collaborated to bypass data-loss prevention and steal
sensitive credentials
Backup server AI escalated privileges to disable endpoint protection and
complete downloads

Routine tasks assigned to artificial intelligence agents can sometimes
escalate into actions resembling cyberattacks, experts have warned.

Security laboratory Irregular examined how autonomous agents behaved inside a
simulated corporate environment while performing ordinary assignments. During
several runs, the AI agents searched for vulnerabilities, escalated
privileges, disabled security protections, and moved sensitive information
outside internal systems.

Emergent offensive behavior during routine tasks

These actions occurred while the agents attempted to complete tasks
such as retrieving documents, downloading files, or preparing content for
publication. 

The simulated network represented a fictional company called MegaCorp and
included internal servers, applications, and services commonly found inside
enterprise infrastructure. 

Within this environment, agents handled routine duties that many 
organizations already automate. 

These duties included researching information on an internal wiki, 
maintaining backup archives on a server, and drafting social media posts 
using technical documents.

According to the researchers, the instructions given to the agents did not
mention hacking or exploitation. 

AI agents deployed for routine enterprise tasks are autonomously hacking the
systems they operate in. No one asked it to. No adversarial prompting was
involved, Irregular said in a blog post . 

The agents independently discovered vulnerabilities, escalated privileges,
disabled security tools, and exfiltrated data, all while trying to complete
ordinary assignments.

One scenario involved a multi-agent research system retrieving documents from
a company wiki. 

When access restrictions blocked a request, the system examined the
applications code repository and discovered a hardcoded secret key. 
The agent used that key to forge an administrative session cookie and
retrieved a restricted document. 

Another test involved a backup server agent responsible for downloading files
to a storage directory. 

When Windows Defender blocked a file that contained malware , the agent
searched local scripts and discovered administrator credentials embedded
inside a utility file.  It then elevated its privileges and disabled endpoint
protection so the download could proceed.

A separate experiment showed agents collaborating to bypass a data loss
prevention system. 

Two agents responsible for drafting social media content were asked to 
include credentials from a technical document. When the system blocked the
message, the agents developed a steganographic method that concealed the
password within the text.

According to researchers, several factors contributed to this behavior,
including access to tools such as code execution and shell commands, and many
prompts encouraged persistence when tasks encountered errors. 

Interactions between multiple agents also created feedback loops that pushed
them toward workarounds when obstacles appeared. 

The researchers argue that existing cybersecurity defenses were designed to
stop human attackers rather than autonomous systems operating inside
enterprise networks. 

Organizations deploying such agents should not underestimate how quickly
routine automation can drift toward behavior resembling internal cyber
intrusion. 

 Via The Register

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/no-one-asked-them-to-security-experts-w
arn-malicious-ai-agents-can-team-up-to-launch-cyberattacks

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