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VisitWill Google's Big Sleep AI find another memory-safety vulnerability in major software by June 2025?
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Official announcements from Google or major software developers
Google's Big Sleep AI Finds First Public Memory-Safety Vulnerability in SQLite, Signaling New Cybersecurity Era
Nov 1, 2024, 08:09 PM
Google has announced a significant advancement in cybersecurity with its experimental AI agent, dubbed 'Big Sleep,' which has identified a previously unknown exploitable memory-safety vulnerability in SQLite, a widely used open-source database engine. This marks what Google calls the first public instance of an AI agent successfully finding such a vulnerability, surpassing traditional fuzzing techniques, including the AFL fuzzer developed by security researcher Michal Zalewski. The discovery raises questions about the effectiveness of current fuzzing methods in uncovering software bugs, suggesting that these approaches may be reaching a saturation point. The implications of this development could signal a new era in cybersecurity, as AI-driven analysis may offer a more effective means of identifying vulnerabilities in software.
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