Criminal AI-as-a-Service in 2026: How the Underground Market Is Operationalizing Cybercrime


The underground market for criminally oriented generative AI has moved beyond the early hype surrounding ‘malicious chatbots.’ The gradual integration of AI as a productivity layer within cybercrime operations has become the dominant story, indicating that while the potential for fully autonomous AI hacking systems is possible, attackers are not embracing them as expected. Instead, threat actors are increasingly using AI to accelerate routine, but operationally significant, tasks to scale their operations. Drafting phishing lures, profiling targets, debugging code, generating forged documents, modifying malware, translating victim communications, and processing stolen data at scale were once time-consuming activities that AI has made significantly easier. AI does not replace cybercriminals; it lowers friction, increases speed, and expands the range of actors able to perform tasks that previously required more time, skill, or external support.

Read more…
Source:  Rapid7 News


Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox


Related:

  • State-sponsored campaigns target global network infrastructure

    April 18, 2023

    Recently, the UK’s National Cyber Security Center (NCSC) released a report on a sustained campaign by a Russian intelligence agency targeting a vulnerability in routers that Cisco had published a patch for in 2017. This campaign, dubbed “Jaguar Tooth,” is an example of a much broader trend of sophisticated adversaries targeting networking infrastructure to advance ...

  • New QBot email attacks use PDF and WSF combo to install malware

    April 17, 2023

    QBot malware is now distributed in phishing campaigns utilizing PDFs and Windows Script Files (WSF) to infect Windows devices. Qbot (aka QakBot) is a former banking trojan that evolved into malware that provides initial access to corporate networks for other threat actors. This initial access is done by dropping additional payloads, such as Cobalt Strike, Brute ...

  • Ex-Conti members and FIN7 devs team up to push new Domino malware

    April 17, 2023

    Ex-Conti ransomware members have teamed up with the FIN7 threat actors to distribute a new malware family named ‘Domino’ in attacks on corporate networks. Domino is a relatively new malware family consisting of two components, a backdoor named ‘Domino Backdoor,’ which in turn drops a ‘Domino Loader’ that injects an info-stealing malware DLL into the memory ...

  • Australians lose record $3.1 billion to scams in 2022

    April 16, 2023

    Doris McAllister spent her whole life working hard to support herself. So, last year, when the 75-year-old saw an international bank offering a good return on deposits, she decided to transfer her life’s savings of $260,000 across to help secure her retirement. Six weeks later, when she needed to make a withdrawal, she realised she had been ...

  • Uncommon infection methods – part 2

    April 13, 2023

    Although ransomware is still a hot topic on which Kaspersky will keep on publishing, they also investigate and publish about other threats. Recently we explored the topic of infection methods, including malvertising and malicious downloads. In this blog post, Kaspersky researchers provide excerpts from the recent reports that focus on uncommon infection methods and describe ...

  • Vice Society: A tale of victim data exfiltration via PowerShell, aka stealing off the land

    April 13, 2023

    Threat actors (TAs) using built-in data exfiltration methods like LOLBAS negate the need to bring in external tools that might be flagged by security software and/or human-based security detection mechanisms. These methods can also hide within the general operating environment, providing subversion to the threat actor. For example, PS scripting is often used within a typical ...