“AI did not create the cybercrime era. It simply handed gasoline, steroids, and a megaphone to a civilization already addicted to greed.”
- A.G.
AI Will Turn the Internet Into a Crime Scene — And the “Free World” Helped Build It
The last time the digital world nearly collapsed, most people barely understood what had happened.
In June 2017, a Russian military hacking unit unleashed a malicious worm called NotPetya. It spread through a Ukrainian accounting software update and detonated across the globe in seconds. Ports froze. Hospitals stalled. Emergency systems buckled. Shipping giant Maersk — responsible for nearly a fifth of world shipping volume — was effectively paralyzed.
The company lost visibility over containers, cargo, destinations, and operations across 76 ports and hundreds of ships.
The only reason the company recovered quickly was pure luck: one server in Ghana survived because of a power outage.
That single untouched machine saved the company from months of chaos.
Global damages from NotPetya reached roughly 10 billion dollars.
And here’s the part that should make every citizen furious:
The cyberweapon worked because it exploited a vulnerability in Microsoft Windows that had been secretly discovered and stockpiled by the National Security Agency.
The NSA kept the vulnerability for espionage purposes instead of ensuring it was fixed.
Then the information leaked.
Then criminals and hostile states got it.
That is the modern “security” model of the digital age:
Governments hoard vulnerabilities.
Corporations monetize insecurity.
Hackers weaponize both.
Ordinary people pay the bill.
And now artificial intelligence is about to supercharge the entire disaster.
AI Is Not Just a Tool — It Is an Arms Race
Cybersecurity researcher Andrei Kucharavy from the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland warns that AI language models are rapidly changing the balance between attackers and defenders.
Translation?
Hackers are about to become faster, cheaper, smarter, and more scalable than at any point in human history.
The newest AI systems can already discover dangerous software vulnerabilities at levels previously reserved for elite experts.
According to reports, the AI model “Mythos” discovered thousands of severe vulnerabilities in widely used software systems. The company behind it, Anthropic, reportedly restricted public access because the model was considered too dangerous for unrestricted release.
Think about that for a second.
The companies building these systems already know the public cannot handle what they are creating.
Yet the race continues anyway.
Because profit, geopolitical competition, and technological dominance matter more than long-term societal stability.
The Real Cybersecurity Crisis Is Human
Politicians act shocked when cybercrime rises.
Executives panic when scams explode.
News anchors pretend society is under attack by mysterious “bad actors.”
But look around.
The so-called leaders of the “free world” have spent years normalizing corruption, manipulation, exploitation, surveillance, and financial predation.
Children grow up watching:
- Governments lie openly.
- Banks gamble economies into collapse.
- Corporations harvest personal data like oil.
- Billionaires avoid taxes while lecturing workers.
- Influencers scam followers for engagement.
- Tech companies addict users by design.
- Political systems reward deception over honesty.
And society is surprised people use AI to scam, steal, manipulate, blackmail, and exploit?
What exactly did we think would happen?
You built a civilization where greed is rewarded and morality is optional.
Then you handed everyone industrial-scale automation tools.
Of course chaos follows.
AI Makes Criminals Faster Than Institutions
Before AI, sophisticated cyberattacks required teams of highly trained specialists.
Now?
A teenager with access to advanced AI tools can:
- Generate believable phishing emails in flawless language.
- Mimic corporate communication styles.
- Create fake invoices.
- Clone voices.
- Automate malware development.
- Analyze stolen data.
- Research victims instantly.
- Conduct social engineering attacks at scale.
The barrier to entry is collapsing.
AI-powered phishing emails are reportedly opened far more frequently than traditional scam emails because they no longer contain the obvious grammatical errors and awkward wording that once exposed fraud.
The scams now sound human.
Sometimes more human than humans.
And AI can personalize attacks instantly.
The fake email no longer comes from a “Nigerian prince.”
Now it comes from:
- your tennis club president,
- your child’s school,
- your local bank,
- your coworker,
- your government office,
- or even your spouse’s cloned voice.
The future of cybercrime is not brute force.
It is psychological warfare automated at planetary scale.
The Most Dangerous Illusion: “AI Will Protect Us”
Yes, AI can also strengthen cyber defense.
Defensive systems can detect anomalies faster than humans.
They can map networks.
They can identify suspicious behavior.
They can isolate compromised accounts automatically.
That matters.
But here is the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to admit:
Defense always reacts.
Attackers innovate.
That asymmetry never disappears.
A defender must secure everything.
An attacker only needs one opening.
And AI dramatically lowers the cost of finding openings.
Even worse:
modern digital infrastructure is already fragile beyond belief.
Hospitals.
Power grids.
Water systems.
Transportation.
Emergency services.
Banking.
Supply chains.
All deeply interconnected.
All software-dependent.
All filled with decades of accumulated technical debt and hidden vulnerabilities.
AI is entering this environment like gasoline entering a burning building.
“Vibe Coding” Might Become a Global Security Catastrophe
Another ticking bomb is AI-generated software itself.
Millions of people with minimal technical knowledge are now building applications using AI coding assistants like OpenAI Codex and Claude Code.
This is marketed as democratization.
In reality, it may also be democratized insecurity.
AI-generated code often reproduces old vulnerabilities, insecure practices, or broken logic. Many users deploying this code cannot even recognize the risks.
The result?
An explosion of badly secured apps, weak infrastructure, and vulnerable systems flooding the internet.
Society is speedrunning software development without understanding the consequences.
It is the digital equivalent of letting untrained people construct skyscrapers during an earthquake.
Governments Are Losing Control — And They Know It
State intelligence agencies are especially interested in AI-driven vulnerability discovery because they already operate sophisticated cyberwarfare programs.
For them, cost is irrelevant.
If AI helps discover new exploitable weaknesses in global infrastructure, they will use it.
Every major power is already involved:
- the United States,
- China,
- Russia,
- and others.
This is not science fiction anymore.
It is geopolitical reality.
At the same time, AI could also expose secret vulnerabilities intelligence agencies have quietly relied upon for years.
That is what happened with the NSA-linked exploit chain that ultimately contributed to NotPetya.
Ironically, AI may undermine the spies as much as it empowers them.
But do not mistake that for safety.
It just means everyone becomes more dangerous simultaneously.
The AI Fantasy Is Dead
For years, Silicon Valley sold AI as liberation:
more productivity,
more creativity,
more efficiency,
more convenience.
And yes, some of that is real.
But here is the other side nobody wants on the marketing poster:
AI is also:
- scalable fraud,
- scalable surveillance,
- scalable manipulation,
- scalable cyberwarfare,
- scalable propaganda,
- scalable impersonation,
- scalable psychological exploitation.
A two-edged sword?
No.
More like a thousand autonomous blades spinning in every direction at once.
Good people can absolutely benefit from AI.
But bad actors adapt faster than institutions.
Always have.
Always will.
And unlike ordinary citizens, organized criminals and intelligence agencies do not care about ethics panels, alignment debates, or press releases about “responsible innovation.”
They care about advantage.
The Real Question Nobody Wants to Ask
The terrifying part is not whether AI will be abused.
That is guaranteed.
The real question is whether modern societies — already drowning in corruption, polarization, inequality, disinformation, and institutional distrust — are psychologically and politically stable enough to survive what comes next.
Because when people no longer trust:
- what they read,
- what they hear,
- what they watch,
- who they speak to,
- or whether systems themselves are compromised,
you do not just get a cybersecurity crisis.
You get civilizational erosion.
And the warning signs are already everywhere.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide
