Apple is willing to bet big on the safety of Apple Intelligence, so much that the tech giant has offered up to a $1 million bounty to anyone who can hack it.
The company announced Thursday that it’s inviting ‘all security researchers – or anyone with interest and a technical curiosity’ to perform ‘their own independent verification of our claims.’
The public has been challenged to test the security of ‘Private Cloud Compute,’ the servers that will receive and process user requests for Apple Intelligence when the AI task is too complex for on-device processing.
The system, according to Apple, features end-to-end encryption and immediately deletes a user’s request once the task is fulfilled.
There are different payouts for certain discoveries, but the $1 million goes to anyone who can run code on the system without being detected and accessing sensitive parts.
Apple Intelligence is a built-in artificial intelligence system coming to the iPhone 16, 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max sometime next week.
Apple is offering a $1 million to anyone who can hack its new AI system, Apple Intelligence
The AI-powered product was unveiled in September, revealing new features for sorting messages, generative writing and creating unique emojis.
But only those with the high-end iPhone 15 smartphones and the new iPhone 16 will have access to the highly-anticipated platform.
Apple CEO Tim Cook said it marks ‘a new chapter in Apple innovation’.
What this means for you as a customer, is that you can expect to find more AI integrated with your apps and devices from now on.
Largely, Apple Intelligence is focused on so-called ‘generative’ AI models, which allow users to create text or images from prompts.
And Apple wants to make sure the system is secure.
‘To further encourage your research in Private Cloud Compute, we’re expanding Apple Security Bounty to include rewards for vulnerabilities that demonstrate a compromise of the fundamental security and privacy guarantees of PCC,’ the company shared in the announcement.
Apple had previously only allowed third-party auditors into its Private Cloud Compute, but now anyone can take a stab at it.
Those up to the challenge also have access to a security guide and virtual environment, which let people analyze Private Cloud Compute inside the macOS Sequoia 15.1 developer preview.
That means individuals participating will need a Mac with an M-series chip and at least 16 GB of RAM to access.
Apple will pay $100,000 to anyone who can execute ‘unattested’ code – or code requests that are unverified by the company.
Anyone who can gain access to a user’s request data or other sensitive information about the user outside the ‘trust boundary’ – a boundary where program data or execution changes its level of ‘trust’ – could win up to $250,000.
And if someone can gain ‘access to a user’s request data or other sensitive information about the user outside the trust boundary’ they will receive $150,000.
A small $50,000 reward is in place if anyone can hack the system to accidentally or unexpectedly expose data.
‘We believe Private Cloud Compute is the most advanced security architecture ever deployed for cloud AI compute at scale, and we look forward to working with the research community to build trust in the system and make it even more secure and private over time,’ said Apple.
Most iOS users will have to wait until next week for Apple Intelligence.
But there will be a waitlist once it launches due to potentially high demand.
The launch version of Apple Intelligence will come with Writing Tools for proofreading and rewriting, Smart Replies that quickly respond to messages, Notification Summaries, Clean Up in Photos, and an initial redesign of Siri, and more.
But certain features – including Genmoji, Image Playground, ChatGPT integration, and Visual Intelligence – are set to arrive as part of iOS 18.2, which should enter beta in the next month or so.
Others will come even later. The fully revamped Siri, for example, won’t be available until sometime in 2025.
Additionally, next week’s release is only compatible with US English, which means countries outside of the US will have to wait until December to be able to use Apple Intelligence in their languages.
This article was originally published by a www.dailymail.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .