AI as tradecraft: How threat actors operationalize AI
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Threat actors are operationalizing AI along the cyberattack lifecycle to accelerate tradecraft, abusing both intended model capabilities and jailbreaking techniques to bypass safeguards and perform malicious activity. As enterprises integrate AI to improve efficiency and productivity, threat actors are adopting the same technologies as operational enablers, embedding AI into their workflows to increase the speed, scale, and resilience of cyber operations.
Microsoft Threat Intelligence has observed that most malicious use of AI today centers on using language models for producing text, code, or media. Threat actors use generative AI to draft phishing lures, translate content, summarize stolen data, generate or debug malware, and scaffold scripts or infrastructure. For these uses, AI functions as a force multiplier that reduces technical friction and accelerates execution, while human operators retain control over objectives, targeting, and deployment decisions.
This dynamic is especially evident in operations likely focused on revenue generation, where efficiency directly translates to scale …
Microsoft Threat Intelligence has observed that most malicious use of AI today centers on using language models for producing text, code, or media. Threat actors use generative AI to draft phishing lures, translate content, summarize stolen data, generate or debug malware, and scaffold scripts or infrastructure. For these uses, AI functions as a force multiplier that reduces technical friction and accelerates execution, while human operators retain control over objectives, targeting, and deployment decisions.
This dynamic is especially evident in operations likely focused on revenue generation, where efficiency directly translates to scale …