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Rabu, 30 Juli 2025

OpenAI agent says it's not a bot

Plus: Apple versus text spam

Forbes
The Wiretap is your weekly digest of cybersecurity, internet privacy and surveillance news. (Did someone forward this to you? To get it in your inbox, subscribe here.)

One of the constant bits of friction in navigating the modern internet is proving to the site you're browsing that you are, in fact, human. Often you can prove it by simply checking a box saying so. But in the brave new world of agentic AI, such basic checks won't be enough to catch AI agents wandering around the internet to  do tasks on their owners' behalf. 

Ars Technica reports that OpenAI's new agent, which uses its own browser to access the internet and perform tasks, was observed by a Reddit user checking one of those "I am not a robot" boxes. As it did so, it provided the following narration: "I'll click the 'Verify you are human' checkbox to complete the verification on Cloudflare. This step is necessary to prove I'm not a bot and proceed with the action."

In this particular case, the assistant didn't face one of the common puzzles aimed at catching bots–the ones that ask you to identify all the pictures with a bicycle or to move pieces of an image around to have it the right way up. But it's just a matter of time before agents can solve those too. 

When the bots get so sophisticated they act like humans, the premise of web "captchas" starts to break down. How do you then protect websites from unwanted, malicious bot traffic? And how do you design sites so that agents representing real people can navigate them effectively?  Let's just hope a web designed for bots isn't that much more annoying for us lowly humans to navigate.

Alex Knapp Senior Editor

Follow me on Bluesky and Forbes.com

People are often the weakest link in the cybersecurity chain. Just last week, cleaning product giant Clorox claimed a cyberattack that may have caused as much as $380 million in damages was the result of a contracted service desk staffer resetting a password for a hacker pretending to work for the company.

IT departments are aware of the risk of human error, of course, and try to address it with education. Usually, this means a few emails and some simple training. But the advice in these types of training is generalized and only rarely tailored to the specific needs of staff. It's no wonder people never bother to read those emails.

This is the problem that cybersecurity startup Fable wants to tackle with a personalized approach. Founded in 2024 by Nicole Jiang, 31, and Dr. Sanny Liao, 42, who spent years at $5.1 billion cybersecurity company Abnormal, Fable claims its AI helps determine which employees need help improving their security practices and offers custom tips and guidance to them. 

Read more at Forbes

The Stories You Have To Read Today
Pro-Ukrainian hacker group Silent Crow took credit for a cyberattack that crippled IT systems of Russian airline Aeroflot, which led to dozens of flights being grounded. 

The viral app Tea, which enabled women to anonymously post images and comments about men they dated, suffered a cyberattack that exposed data about thousands of users. 

Researchers found security vulnerabilities in door-to-door luggage service Airportr that would enable hackers to access users' flight itineraries and personal information. The bugs could also grant would-be cybercriminals the ability to redirect the final destination of someone's luggage. 

Winner Of The Week
Google will be launching new security features for its Workspace apps designed to prevent an exploit that allows hackers to use cookies to take over accounts. The new feature will bind cookies to specific devices, preventing remote hacks. 
Loser Of The Week
Apple's latest version of iOS, due this fall, will include more features to filter text spam out of your messaging app. That could have outsized impact for political groups, which worry that this may also filter out their often aggressive fundraising texts
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