Back to articles
EngineeringArs Technica - Technology Lab

Mozilla says 271 vulnerabilities found by Mythos have "almost no false positives"

The developer of Firefox says it has "completely bought in" on AI-assisted bug discovery.

This article is displayed from the content provided directly by the source RSS feed. The original source is credited at the bottom of the page.

Mozilla says 271 vulnerabilities found by Mythos have "almost no false positives"

The disbelief was palpable when Mozilla’s CTO last month declared that AI-assisted vulnerability detection meant “ zero-days are numbered ” and “defenders finally have a chance to win, decisively.” After all, it looked like part of an all-too-familiar pattern: Cherry-pick a handful of impressive AI-achieved results, leave out any of the fine print that might paint a more nuanced picture, and let the hype train roll on.

Mindful of the skepticism, Mozilla on Thursday provided a behind-the-scenes look into its use of Anthropic Mythos—an AI model for identifying software vulnerabilities—to ferret out 271 Firefox security flaws over two months. In a post , Mozilla engineers said the finally ready-for-prime-time breakthrough they achieved was primarily the result of two things: (1) improvement in the models themselves and (2) Mozilla’s development of a custom “ harness ” that supported Mythos as it analyzed Firefox source code.

"Almost no false positives"

The engineers said their earlier brushes with AI-assisted vulnerability detection were fraught with “unwanted slop.” Typically, someone would prompt a model to analyze a block of code. The model would then produce plausible-reading bug reports, and often at unprecedented scales. Invariably, however, when human developers further investigated, they’d find a large percentage of the details had been hallucinated. The humans would then need to invest significant work handling the vulnerability reports the old-fashioned way.

Read full article

Comments

Need an n8n workflow or help installing it?

After the briefing, move to execution: find an n8n template or a creator who can adapt it to your tools.

Source

Ars Technica - Technology Lab - arstechnica.com

View original publication