<p>The recent debut of OpenAI’s Daybreak means security leaders are waking up to a new reality: Artificial intelligence is no longer merely supporting cyberdefense but driving it.</p>
<p>Accessible now to verified organizations and security teams, <a href=”https://openai.com/daybreak/”>Daybreak</a> combines OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 models with its Codex Security system to embed automated, intelligent vulnerability discovery directly into operational workflows and across codebases, along with remediation guidance and patch generation and validation. The goal, according to OpenAI, is to speed up cyber defense and create software with continuous security baked in — what it calls “resilient by design.”</p>
<p>OpenAI rival Anthropic announced a similar tool in <a href=”https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/news/366642478/Claude-Mythos-Preview-and-the-new-rules-of-cybersecurity”>Claude Mythos Preview</a> earlier this year — part of its Project Glasswing initiative — but has so far strictly limited access to around 50 partner organizations.</p>
<p>While experts say the <a href=”https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/tip/Evaluate-the-risks-and-benefits-of-AI-in-cybersecurity”>benefits of integrating security and AI</a> are significant, some also have concerns about these models working <i>too</i> well — uncovering a deluge of vulnerabilities that the typical organization is currently ill-equipped to address.</p>
<p>”There’s going to be a lot more strain on enterprises’ vulnerability management programs because there will be many more new patches coming in that have to be tested, deployed and verified,” Eric Parizo, founder, president and chief analyst at Cernivera Research, told TechTarget Security. “That’s still a largely manual process for most organizations.”</p>
<p>Regularly taking applications offline for patching also becomes a business continuity issue, Parizo added. Other experts warned that information from integrated AI security tools should be validated by internal security teams to ensure accuracy. Another concern is that AI tools themselves have their own <a href=”https://www.techtarget.com/searchenterpriseai/tip/How-to-manage-generative-AI-security-risks-in-the-enterprise”>weaknesses and vulnerabilities</a>.</p>
<p>”Using traditional cybersecurity practices such as defense-in-depth and least privilege will aid organizations in determining how best to deploy and operate these AI systems into their workflows,” said Harold Booth, computer scientist at NIST. That might mean using authentication and authorization technologies to <a href=”https://www.techtarget.com/searchsecurity/tip/Cybersecuritys-agentic-AI-identity-crisis-and-how-to-fix-it”>control what AI systems have access to</a>, he explained, or using containerization or other sandboxing approaches to restrict AI systems’ impact.</p>
<p>Analysts point to another significant operational issue: When a system such as OpenAI Daybreak discovers a vulnerability, tests the issue, and suggests and validates fixes, who is responsible for the results? Organizations will need human operators to oversee and own AI decisions.</p>
<p>Beyond operational accountability, Parizo said platforms such as Daybreak also raise questions about data security, with the AI’s access to enterprise software creating new third-party risks.</p>
<p>These technical and operational considerations for security decision-makers come against a backdrop in which <a target=”_blank” href=”https://www.cybersecuritydive.com/news/frontier-ai-rapid-discovery-security-vulnerabilities/820258/” rel=”noopener”>both attackers and defenders are adopting AI</a>. Unfortunately, according to experts, attackers will likely have an early advantage as organizations work through how to manage and govern new AI-driven security platforms such as OpenAI Daybreak.</p>
<p>”When something new and unproven comes out, no matter what it is, in the early going it almost always gives attackers an advantage, because defenders just perpetually have more on their plates. Attackers have one job: to cause havoc and steal stuff,” Parizo said. “That’s why I think this is quickly becoming the No. 1 issue CISOs have to think about, strategize for and budget for, the rest of this year and going forward.”</p>
<p><i>Craig Galbraith is the founder and owner of Galbraith Multimedia, an independent journalism company that provides writing, editing, video hosting, podcasting, onstage presentation and consulting services to the technology industry.</i></p>
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