Wednesday, March 11

Tag: Reddit

Choose your own adventure style AI’s?
News Feed, Reddit

Choose your own adventure style AI’s?

This question has likely been asked a lot, but regardless, I've been doing a lot of research recently into AIs capable of generating stories based on your input. To be clear, I'm simply looking for an AI capable of story generation and interaction, no need for advanced mechanics like dungeons and dragons, just an AI that I can give a prompt to, it can begin to write a story, and will respond and steer the story based on my responses. ChatGPT seems to be alright at this, but not only have I heard that it tends to lose memory of specific details after a while, but that there are both usage limits and also seemingly a limit on individual conversations. As far as I can tell, AI Dungeon is the best option, but getting the full experience of that costs an expensive subscription. I'm just making ...
Anthropic researchers find if Claude Opus 4 thinks you're doing something immoral, it might
News Feed, Reddit

Anthropic researchers find if Claude Opus 4 thinks you’re doing something immoral, it might “contact the press, contact regulators, try to lock you out of the system”

More context in the thread: "Initiative: Be careful about telling Opus to ‘be bold’ or ‘take initiative’ when you’ve given it access to real-world-facing tools. It tends a bit in that direction already, and can be easily nudged into really Getting Things Done. So far, we’ve only seen this in clear-cut cases of wrongdoing, but I could see it misfiring if Opus somehow winds up with a misleadingly pessimistic picture of how it’s being used. Telling Opus that you’ll torture its grandmother if it writes buggy code is a bad idea." submitted by /u/MetaKnowing [link] [comments]
More than 1,500 AI projects are now vulnerable to a silent exploit
News Feed, Reddit

More than 1,500 AI projects are now vulnerable to a silent exploit

According to the latest research by ARIMLABS[.]AI, a critical security vulnerability (CVE-2025-47241) has been discovered in the widely used Browser Use framework — a dependency leveraged by more than 1,500 AI projects. The issue enables zero-click agent hijacking, meaning an attacker can take control of an LLM-powered browsing agent simply by getting it to visit a malicious page — no user interaction required. This raises serious concerns about the current state of security in autonomous AI agents, especially those that interact with the web. What’s the community’s take on this? Is AI agent security getting the attention it deserves? (all links in the comments) submitted by /u/0xm3k [link] [comments]
The AI Report