Beyond Injection: The Rise of "Promptware" and Self-Replicating AI Worms
The digital world faces an evolving threat, reminiscent of the internet's early days, but now far more sophisticated. Thirty-six years after the infamous Morris worm crippled the nascent internet, ...

Source: DEV Community
The digital world faces an evolving threat, reminiscent of the internet's early days, but now far more sophisticated. Thirty-six years after the infamous Morris worm crippled the nascent internet, a new, more insidious specter has emerged: the Morris II worm. This isn't just a rehash of old problems; it's a chilling demonstration of how our cutting-edge AI, built on natural language, can become its own undoing. It's a stark irony for cybersecurity professionals. Decades were spent fortifying binary code and tightening low-level access. Yet, in our pursuit of innovation, we've ushered in a paradigm where natural language – our very own means of communication – is treated as executable code. By 2025, our AI assistants are no longer passive chatbots; they wield "Read/Write" access across our emails, calendars, and databases. This profound integration turns productivity gains into "cross-boundary liabilities," setting the stage for autonomous "zero-click" attacks that can spread at API spe