Artificial intelligence has spent the last couple of years making everyday life easier. It writes emails, summarizes meetings, edits photos, helps with homework, and somehow always knows what recipe you can make with leftover onions and a tomato in the fridge. But while most of us use AI to save time, cybercriminals are increasingly using it to make hacking faster, smarter, and far more scalable.
That’s the biggest takeaway from new findings shared by Google’s Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG). The company says AI is no longer just a side tool for attackers; it’s actually becoming part of the core system powering modern cybercrime. And that changes the conversation around AI quite a bit.