Malwarebytes Inside ChatGPT: AI Now Catches Scammers Red-Handed
Компания Malwarebytes выпустила инструмент для ChatGPT, который превращает чат-бота в персонального эксперта по кибербезопасности. Теперь пользователи могут про
AI-processed from ZDNet AI; edited by Hamidun News
Picture this: you get a strange email from a "bank support service" or an SMS about winning a lottery you never entered. In the past, you would have simply ignored it or, in the worst case, clicked the link and lost your data. But now the rules of the game are changing. Malwarebytes decided enough is enough and brought its security tools directly into the ChatGPT interface. This isn't just another update—it's an attempt to make AI genuinely useful for personal security.
Until now, ChatGPT was a great conversationalist but a poor security guard. When you asked it to check a link, it could start hallucinating or offer generic advice like "be careful." The neural network had no access to current blacklists of malicious domains and databases of fraudulent phone numbers. Malwarebytes fixes this gap. They created a bridge between a massive threat intelligence database and OpenAI's linguistic capabilities. Now you can simply copy suspicious text into the chat, and the system will deliver a verdict based on actual facts, not word-by-word probability calculations.
Why is this happening now? Scammers have started using AI to create perfect phishing emails with no grammar errors and the right emotional tone. Fighting AI-driven threats with old methods is becoming impossible. The cybersecurity industry understands: if they don't embed themselves into the chat-bots users love, they'll lose the battle for attention. Malwarebytes is betting that users are too lazy to open a separate antivirus or visit special websites to check links. It's simpler to ask your "friend" in a chat that's already open in the next tab.
Technically, this is implemented through a specialized GPT that calls the Malwarebytes API. It analyzes not just the link itself but the context of the message. If a link leads to a freshly registered domain in the .xyz zone and the message text demands you "urgently update your password," the system will raise an alarm. This gives the user that crucial pause that's missing in moments of social engineering. We're used to trusting technology, and Malwarebytes is trying to channel that trust in a safer direction.
Of course, there are pitfalls. The privacy question hasn't gone away: by sending suspicious links or emails to ChatGPT, you're essentially sharing that information with both OpenAI and Malwarebytes. For a regular user, this is a small price for keeping their bank account safe, but for the corporate sector, it could become a stumbling block. Nevertheless, for the mass market, this is one of the most useful applications of GPT Store in recent times. We're seeing the hype around "just chat-bots" give way to the creation of concrete, utilitarian tools.
What does this mean for the industry as a whole? Likely, we'll see a wave of similar integrations. Norton, Kaspersky, and other market players won't be able to stand aside for long. In the future, antivirus as a separate application might disappear entirely, transforming into an invisible layer inside your AI assistant that filters incoming information in real time. Malwarebytes simply claimed this parking spot first.
The bottom line: Will ChatGPT become a full-fledged defender against scams or is this just clever marketing by Malwarebytes? In any case, having a free lie detector for links on hand is one less reason to be fooled.
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