Firefox just fixed 271 vulnerabilities found by AI and the warning is worth paying attention to

Published on May 05, 2026 at 1:58 AM (UTC+4)
by Author Daisy Edwards
Last updated on May 05, 2026 at 1:58 AM (UTC+4) · Edited by Mason Jones
Firefox just fixed 271 vulnerabilities found by AI and the warning is worth paying attention to
Firefox just fixed 271 vulnerabilities found by AI and the warning is worth paying attention to

A huge new update to Mozilla Firefox has secretly fixed hundreds of security flaws, and the way they were discovered is what’s really turning heads.

Mozilla revealed that an advanced AI model helped uncover a staggering 271 vulnerabilities before they could cause serious problems.

The AI in question, developed by Anthropic, is designed specifically to hunt down security weaknesses at scale.

And while this sounds like great news for users, experts say it also comes with a warning the industry must not ignore.

How Firefox just fixed 271 vulnerabilities with AI

The vulnerabilities in popular search engine Firefox’s code were discovered using Anthropic’s experimental ‘Mythos’ AI system, which was deployed to scan the tech giant’s codebase in depth.

That number alone is scary, but what’s more impressive is how quickly the AI was able to do it, tasks that would normally take teams of human security researchers months or even years were accelerated like crazy.

Mozilla’s leadership has even suggested that tools like this are now approaching the capabilities of top-tier security experts, highlighting just how powerful AI-driven cybersecurity has become.

In simple terms, AI is no longer just assisting developers, it is actively reshaping how software is tested and secured.

The major warning from Mozilla

Here’s the catch: the same technology that helps defenders can also be used by attackers.

Mozilla has warned that while AI won’t completely upend cybersecurity overnight, it will create a rocky transition period where both hackers and defenders gain access to more powerful tools.

That means vulnerabilities could be discovered faster than ever, but also exploited faster if they are not patched in time.

There is also a broader concern about inequality in the tech world.

Larger companies may have the resources to use advanced AI systems like Mythos, but smaller developers and open-source projects could struggle to keep up.

So while this breakthrough is a win for Firefox users right now, it signals a future where staying secure will depend on keeping pace with increasingly powerful AI tools.

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