• progress_activity cloud_sync

    Reconnection to the server…

    Movim cannot talk with the server, please try again later

  • back_to_tab fullscreen tile_small dialpad mic videocam switch_camera screen_share

    mic_none No sound detected from your microphone


    • Public subscriptions

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

  • Register Login

    Movim

    movim.chatterboxtown.us


  • group_work rss_feed
    add Follow

    ArsTechnica

    • Ar chevron_right

      New attack can steal cryptocurrency by planting false memories in AI chatbots

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 13 May 2025

    Imagine a world where AI-powered bots can buy or sell cryptocurrency, make investments, and execute software-defined contracts at the blink of an eye, depending on minute-to-minute currency prices, breaking news, or other market-moving events. Then imagine an adversary causing the bot to redirect payments to an account they control by doing nothing more than entering a few sentences into the bot’s prompt.

    That’s the scenario depicted in recently released research that developed a working exploit against ElizaOS, a fledgling open source framework.

    ElizaOS is a framework for creating agents that use large language models to perform various blockchain-based transactions on behalf of a user based on a set of predefined rules. It was introduced in October under the name Ai16z and was changed to its current name in January. The framework remains largely experimental, but champions of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs)—a model in which communities or companies are governed by decentralized computer programs running on blockchains—see it as a potential engine for jumpstarting the creation of agents that automatically navigate these so-called DAOs on behalf of end users.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      New attack can steal cryptocurrency by planting false memories in AI chatbots

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 13 May 2025

    Imagine a world where AI-powered bots can buy or sell cryptocurrency, make investments, and execute software-defined contracts at the blink of an eye, depending on minute-to-minute currency prices, breaking news, or other market-moving events. Then imagine an adversary causing the bot to redirect payments to an account they control by doing nothing more than entering a few sentences into the bot’s prompt.

    That’s the scenario depicted in recently released research that developed a working exploit against ElizaOS, a fledgling open source framework.

    ElizaOS is a framework for creating agents that use large language models to perform various blockchain-based transactions on behalf of a user based on a set of predefined rules. It was introduced in October under the name Ai16z and was changed to its current name in January. The framework remains largely experimental, but champions of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs)—a model in which communities or companies are governed by decentralized computer programs running on blockchains—see it as a potential engine for jumpstarting the creation of agents that automatically navigate these so-called DAOs on behalf of end users.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
    • Ar chevron_right

      New attack can steal cryptocurrency by planting false memories in AI chatbots

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 13 May 2025

    Imagine a world where AI-powered bots can buy or sell cryptocurrency, make investments, and execute software-defined contracts at the blink of an eye, depending on minute-to-minute currency prices, breaking news, or other market-moving events. Then imagine an adversary causing the bot to redirect payments to an account they control by doing nothing more than entering a few sentences into the bot’s prompt.

    That’s the scenario depicted in recently released research that developed a working exploit against ElizaOS, a fledgling open source framework.

    ElizaOS is a framework for creating agents that use large language models to perform various blockchain-based transactions on behalf of a user based on a set of predefined rules. It was introduced in October under the name Ai16z and was changed to its current name in January. The framework remains largely experimental, but champions of decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs)—a model in which communities or companies are governed by decentralized computer programs running on blockchains—see it as a potential engine for jumpstarting the creation of agents that automatically navigate these so-called DAOs on behalf of end users.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagchatbots tagchatbots tagchatbots tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation tagcontext manipulation taglarge language models taglarge language models taglarge language models tagprompt injections tagprompt injections tagprompt injections

    • Pictures 3 image

    • visibility
    • visibility
    • visibility
  • cloud_queue

    Powered by Movim