Meta says ChatGPT-related malware is on the rise

Potential abuses of generative AI technology ChatGPT are causing concern as the phenomenon is likened to cryptocurrency scams.

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2023. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

A smartphone with a displayed ChatGPT logo is placed on a computer motherboard in this illustration of 23 February 2023.

A smartphone with a displayed ChatGPT logo is placed on a computer motherboard in this illustration of 23 February 2023.

Facebook owner Meta said on Wednesday it had uncovered malware purveyors leveraging public interest in ChatGPT to lure users into downloading malicious apps and browser extensions, likening the phenomenon to cryptocurrency scams.

Since March, the social media giant has found around ten malware families and more than 1,000 malicious links that were promoted as tools featuring the popular artificial intelligence-powered chatbot, it said in a report.

In some cases, the malware delivered working ChatGPT functionality alongside abusive files, the company said.

Speaking at a press briefing on the report, Meta chief information security officer Guy Rosen said that for bad actors, “ChatGPT is the new crypto.”

Rosen and other Meta executives said the company was preparing its defences for a variety of potential abuses linked to generative AI technologies like ChatGPT, which can quickly create human-like writing, music, and art.

Lawmakers have flagged the tools as likely to make online disinformation campaigns easier to propagate.

Asked if generative AI was already being used in information operations, the executives said it was still early, though Rosen said he expected “bad actors” to use the technologies to “try to speed up and perhaps scale up” their activities.

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