• PALM BEACH, Fla.—After weeks of back-and-forth with AI company Anthropic, the Pentagon is actively talking with all four major U.S. AI players—Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, and xAI—to ensure the companies and the Defense Department are at "the same baseline" regarding Pentagon expectations, the undersecretary of defense for research and engineering said Tuesday. 

    “We actually signed contracts with all four of them over the summer without a lot of specificity,” Emil Michael told a group of venture capital investors during an Amazon Web Services event. “Now we want to deploy [them] on our system so other people can build agents and pilots, and deploy it,” he said. 

    In other words, after months of exercises and experiments, the Pentagon is looking to allow different command elements and business entities to build AI agents that can perform a wider variety of tasks with minimal human oversight.

    The discussions between Anthropic and the Pentagon have grown increasingly tense. Sources inside the company told Reuters the Defense Department was pushing to use Anthropic’s AI models for domestic surveillance and autonomous weapons targeting, and Axios reported the Pentagon is “close” to cutting ties with the company over Anthropic’s refusal to give the Pentagon unrestricted access to its models. Some Pentagon officials, speaking anonymously, have even vowed to make Anthropic “pay a price” for its perceived lack of cooperation.

    Anthropic, which is heavily backed by AWS, is “having productive conversations, in good faith” with the Pentagon, according to a company spokesperson. 

    Michael struck a far more conciliatory note than other Pentagon officials who have spoken on the spat, and appeared at the event beside AWS Vice President of Worldwide Public Sector Dave Levy.

    However, Michael did not move from the Pentagon’s red line. “We want all four of them,” he said, describing OpenAI, Google, xAI, and Anthropic as America’s “AI champions” with the financial staying power for long-term partnership.

    Still, Michael noted there are a wide variety of roles the companies might be able to play, and the Pentagon wants different business and command elements to determine what to do with the models, rather than have the companies tell the military what they can and cannot do. 

    “We're wanting all four companies to hear the same principle, which is: we have to be able to use any model for all lawful use cases.”

    Of the four companies the Pentagon has contracted with, Michael said Anthropic is the only holdout on the issue of their ethical safeguards versus the Pentagon’s. 

    “Some of these companies have sort of different philosophies about what they want it to be used for it or not, but then selling to the Department of War. We do Department of War-like things.”

    The Pentagon’s own safety or ethical safeguards must over-rule company safeguards, he said. He described an “extremely dangerous” hypothetical in which the U.S. military could be using an AI agent that suddenly stopped functioning due to embedded company safeguards. “That’s a risk I cannot take.”

    The Pentagon has its own safeguards, a list of ethical principles enacted during the first Trump administration that governs everything from development to testing to deployment of AI systems. While the Pentagon’s newest AI acceleration strategy questions the very meaning of “responsible AI,” Michael said adherence to the AI ethics principles is still very much in place. 

    “The good news/bad news about a hierarchical department is when there's a set of secretary-validated guidance directive memos that lays out the policies and procedures, people follow them. So that's not an issue.”

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  • A technical mistake in the popular Chat & Ask AI app has left 300 million private messages from 25 million users exposed online. Discover what happened and how you can protect your personal data when using AI chatbots.

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  • SAN DIEGO—Defense tech firm Saronic turned a former Amazon warehouse into a schoolhouse, testing facility, and soon-to-be hub for spare parts for unmanned surface vehicles.

    A space that essentially used to be a “giant fridge” will soon hold at least 15 of the company’s 24-foot Corsair robot boats on one side and USV parts on the other, as part of Saronic’s West Coast Supply Hub, said Nick Stoner, Saronic’s vice president of growth.  And that’s just a quarter of the available space in the 80,000-square foot facility. The additional storage will effectively double the number of boats here.

    The boats are shipped in from Saronic’s headquarters in Austin, Texas and, once they’re in San Diego, can be outfitted for “bespoke prototyping” with different payloads, such as sensors or an unmanned aerial system, for customers. They can also be repaired more quickly on site. 

    “Every time that you put something into the ocean, the ocean gets a vote; something might break,” Stoner said. “If you have a problem with one of the boats out here and you need a changed out part—no different than, you know, a Toyota 4Runner—we'll have all of those parts here on the West Coast, rather than having to go back to Austin.” 

    The facility, which opened in October, is primarily used for the operations, maintenance, and sustainment of Saronic’s small USVs. Saronic has about 35 employees based here, but aims to have more than 100 by the end of this year, adding roles in engineering, software, hardware, and mechanical roles. 

    There’s office space, phone booths, multiple classrooms, storage, and lots of room to expand. Teaching customers how to operate and maintain the autonomous vessels, which can also be remote controlled, is also a key function and focus for the San Diego facility, touching on Navy concerns about integrating USVs into the fleet long term.

    Several Corsairs had their hoods popped during a recent tour, but one had the engine block exposed so students could see how to best access the boat’s systems 

    The goal is to tailor training “so that sailors are basically self-sufficient on the boats,” he said. 

    Welcome

    You’ve reached the Defense Business Brief, where we dig into what the Pentagon buys, who they’re buying from, and why. Send along your tips, feedback, and rooftop recommendations to lwilliams@defenseone.com. Check out the Defense Business Brief archive here, and tell your friends to subscribe!

    Zumwalts + battleships? Zumwalt-class destroyers could be a good testbed for weapons systems for future battleships, in part, because they have an “amazing capability to generate electricity, which is something we need for lasers. And that would be kind of a match made in heaven,” Vice Adm. Brendan McLane, who leads Naval Surface Forces, told reporters following the WEST conference. 

    The ship is also designed to be difficult to detect, which could be of interest to battleship designers, he said. “Plus, it's really big. It's the biggest thing that we have—aside from an LHA or an LHD,” which are amphibious ships, he said. “I am very, very interested in de-risking battleship by testing and doing more things with Zumwalt.” 

    The idea is to mimic how the Navy developed the Aegis Weapons Systems by modifying a Spruance-class destroyer hull. “Aegis worked really, really well. And then we were able to take that Aegis Weapon System and put it on a new hull, which is the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer,” he said. 

    SECNAV has questions about maintenance delays. After nearly a year of pushing shipbuilders to increase production, Navy Secretary John Phelan said he’s focused on ship maintenance backlogs. 

    “Why are we so far behind? Why can't we get ships out?” Phelan said during a Q&A following his WEST closing keynote. “I went to [Naval Station] Rota, and those guys crank it out. And I'm like, why aren't we doing this across the fleet?…This seems to be working.”

    The answer: it’s a work in progress. 

    “The thing that I'm sure impressed SECNAV: the shipyard in Rota is 100 percent delivering on time,” Vice Adm. McLane told reporters. “Fleet commanders love predictability. Like the thing that you hate is the uncertainty of, is it going to be delayed, and if it's delayed, how long and why isn't it done yet?” 

    SURFLANT first incorporated the model Rota uses as a component of Task Group Greyhound, and continues to use it today, McLane said. “We're close to 100% finishing on time. And the other cool part of it is by reducing the overall length of time of these, [it’s] good for small business. So East Coast Repair was able to get into the ISRA business, took it super seriously and finished on time as well. So from Mayport to Norfolk, those shipyards have been doing that and doing that well for us,” McLane said. 

    The model is now being used on the West Coast for all destroyers, he said, and amphibious ships will be up next: “Not quite there yet. But super excited about how we can do that and get to better on-time completion [percentages].”

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  • New research from the Citizen Lab has found signs that Kenyan authorities used a commercial forensic extraction tool manufactured by Israeli company Cellebrite to break into a prominent dissident’s phone, making it the latest case of abuse of the technology targeting civil society. The interdisciplinary research unit at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs & Public

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  • Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed a critical security flaw in the Grandstream GXP1600 series of VoIP phones that could allow an attacker to seize control of susceptible devices. The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-2329, carries a CVSS score of 9.3 out of a maximum of 10.0. It has been described as a case of unauthenticated stack-based buffer overflow that could result in remote code

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  • Initial Sentinel ICBM expected by early 2030, Air Force says. Service leaders say that the program will enter its engineering and manufacturing development phase this year, one year earlier than recently expected. The program was awarded to Northrop Grumman in 2020, but by 2024 had blown its budget and schedule so badly that the decision to enter the EMD phase was rescinded. 

    The program has made “considerable progress over the last 12-18 months,” Air Force leaders said on Tuesday, including successful ground tests, solid rocket motor qualifications, and critical design reviews. 

    Somewhat improbably, the service leaders said that the acceleration was partially due to the December appointment of a Pentagon overseer for Sentinel and several other top-priority Air Force programs. Defense One’s Thomas Novelly has more, here.

    See also: The Government Accountability Office has updated its latest report on the Sentinel program.

    The Navy struck three more boats on Feb. 16: Two in the “Eastern Pacific” and one in the Caribbean, killing “eleven male narco-terrorists,” according to a Tuesday press release from the U.S. military’s Southern Command. 

    ICYMI: “A broad range of legal specialists on the use of lethal force have said that the strikes are illegal extrajudicial killings because the military is not permitted to deliberately target civilians—even suspected criminals—who do not pose an imminent threat of violence,” the New York Times notes in its updated tracker

    The Pentagon launched a competition for voice-controlled drone swarms. Elon Musk’s SpaceX and xAI have both said they will join the fray, Bloomberg reported Monday.

    Related:The El Paso No-Fly Debacle Is Just the Beginning of a Drone Defense Mess,” WIRED reported Tuesday, citing the difficulty of defending densely-populated cities.

    DARPA’s futuristic drone concept moves one step closer to flight. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s X-68A LongShot, which is pitched as an air-launched drone armed with air-to-air missiles, just completed “full-scale wind tunnel tests and successful trials of the vehicle's parachute recovery and weapons-release systems,” officials said in a statement. 

    The drone is intended to extend the lethality of F-15 aircraft, “fly[ing] ahead of follow-on forces, and engag[ing] enemy targets with its own air-to-air missiles” while allowing pilots “to remain farther from the front lines,” DARPA said. 

    General Atomics, selected to develop the idea in 2021, is leading the design, build, and demonstration of the unmanned drone concept, Defense One’s Novelly reports. In tech-speak, “LongShot burns down significant technical risk and presents a viable path for the military services to increase air combat reach and effectiveness from uninhabited, air-launched platforms,” Col. John Casey, DARPA LongShot program manager, said in the news release. Read more, here.


    Welcome to this Wednesday edition of The D Brief, a newsletter focused on developments affecting the future of U.S. national security, brought to you by Ben Watson with Bradley Peniston and Thomas Novelly. It’s more important than ever to stay informed, so we’d like to take a moment to thank you for reading. Share your tips and feedback here. And if you’re not already subscribed, you can do that here. On this day in 1955, the U.S. military staged 900 troops 2.8 miles south of a still-forming mushroom cloud—and in the known fallout path—to observe the response to a nuclear detonation 750 feet above the ground in Nevada as part of Operation Teapot. Subsequent tests would place troops much closer—for example, Shot Tesla on March 1 put some people just 1.4 miles from ground zero. 

    Around the world

    Satellite imagery this week shows the U.S. Navy’s Abraham Lincoln carrier off the coast of Oman, which is about 440 miles from Iran, the BBC reported Monday. Several other U.S. ships and destroyers are staging in Bahrain, much closer to Iran. 

    The sides appear not “to have agreed on anything substantial” at Tuesday’s U.S.-Iran talks in Geneva. One mediator did claim “good progress towards identifying common goals and relevant technical issues,” analysts at the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War wrote in their Tuesday afternoon assessment. The White House wants to stop Iran’s nuclear enrichment process for at least three years, and possibly as many as five; Iran has said publicly it would only consider a three-year halt but only in exchange for considerable economic relief, including unfreezing $6 billion held in Qatar. U.S. officials, on the other hand, are reportedly worried that money would go directly to bolstering Iran’s vast missile program

    Iranian naval drills in the Hormuz Strait continued into Wednesday. Those operations, which began Monday, have included “deploying fast attack craft and testing unspecified missiles and drones,” ISW reports. 

    Meantime, “What we are seeing isn't just strike preparation” from the U.S. Navy near Iran, “but rather a broader deterrent deployment capable of being scaled up or down,” Justin Crump of the risk intelligence firm Sibylline told the BBC. “This means it has more depth and sustainability than the force packages arranged for either Venezuela or [the joint Israeli-U.S. operation] Midnight Hammer last year. It's designed to sustain an engagement and counter all potential responses against U.S. assets in the region and, of course, Israel.”  

    India’s Coast Guard seized three vessels with cargo allegedly linked to Iran, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday, nearly two weeks after the ships were captured northwest of Mumbai and Feb. 6. “A British maritime security company, identified them as the Al Jafzia, the Asphalt Star and the Stellar Ruby. All three tankers were sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury last year, when using different names, for allegedly transporting Iranian oil,” the Journal reports. 

    “The Stellar Ruby had just received a cargo of Iranian asphalt from the Asphalt Star, which came from Iran,” while the “Al Jafzia was loaded with naphtha, a crude byproduct it had received mid-January from another vessel…under U.S. sanctions that was loaded in Iran and wasn’t detained.” 

    Missile watch in the Pacific: The U.S. is planning to “increase deployments of U.S. cutting-edge missile and unmanned systems to the Philippines,” the State Department announced Tuesday—likely extending the Typhon missile system first deployed to the region in April 2024. Similar systems were observed in the Philippines the following January, Australia in July, and in Japan this past September. 

    The Typhon system is lauded for its anti-ship capability and uses modified Navy SM-6 and Tomahawk missiles, with estimated 290- and 1,000-mile ranges, respectively. 

    The system’s presence in the Pacific is widely seen as challenging to China and Russia, the Congressional Research Service notes in its report on the Typhon published last fall. Observers could see the system in use during the upcoming joint U.S.-Philippine Balikatan exercises, scheduled later this spring. Read more from the State Department, here.  

    Canada has a new defense-industry plan to reduce its reliance on the U.S., including a goal of doubling its own exports and creating more than 120,000 jobs over the next decade, the Globe and Mail reported Sunday. For some perspective, “Canada’s defence sector is made up of nearly 600 companies, which contribute more than $9.6-billion to the country’s GDP and 81,200 jobs,” the paper writes. Relatedly, about 70% of its acquisitions have been purchased from U.S. firms, but Ottawa now wants that same percentage to come from Canadian firms within 10 years. 

    America’s northern neighbors also plan to spend 5% of their GDP on defense by 2035; it currently allocates 2% of GDP on defense expenditures. “This will mean spending $180-billion on defence procurement, $290-billion on defence-related infrastructure and $125-billion on downstream economic activity,” the Globe and Mail reports from the new strategy document. For many of these planned changes, Canada expects to tap its aerospace and ammunition-production industries, as well as sensors, drones and digital systems, which includes AI and quantum computing. 

    Canada also wants to launch its own version of DARPA, known as the Bureau of Research, Engineering and Advanced Leadership in Innovation and Science, “with the first round of projects selected by late 2026.” 

    The plans were formulated “so we are never hostage to the decisions of others when it comes to our security,” Prime Minister Mark Carney said Tuesday according to Politico. “There are many strengths to this partnership that we have with the United States, but it is a dependency,” he said. 

    Update: Russian officials indeed murdered leading opposition figure Alexei Navalny with a poison while he was serving time in Siberian penal colony two years ago, the British government said in a statement this past weekend. 

    “Consistent, collaborative work has confirmed through laboratory testing that the deadly toxin found in the skin of Ecuador dart frogs (epibatidine) was found in samples from Alexei Navalny’s body and highly likely resulted in his death,” 10 Downing Street said Saturday. “Only the Russian state had the means, motive and opportunity to deploy this lethal toxin to target Navalny during his imprisonment in a Russian penal colony in Siberia, and we hold it responsible for his death,” they added. 

    Investigators from Sweden, France, the Netherlands and Germany teamed up with the Brits to arrive at this conclusion. “This alarming pattern of behaviour follows the targeting of the Skripal’s with Novichok on the streets of Salisbury in 2018 and Russian troops’ frequent use of chemical weapons on the battlefield in Ukraine,” the statement says. Read more, here

    While Russian-Ukrainian talks drag on, Russia’s military continues to pound Ukraine’s energy infrastructure with a barrage of missiles and drones, including more than 400 overnight Monday. 

    “Russian forces have been launching large strike packages in recent months in the days before and after bilateral and trilateral negotiations but are likely refraining from fully maximizing Russia’s strike capabilities in order to avoid upsetting US President Donald Trump,” analysts at ISW wrote in their Tuesday assessment. “The Kremlin may seek to portray its compliance with another moratorium on energy strikes as a major Russian concession while preparing to launch another devastating strike against Ukraine in the near future.”

    Also notable: “Russian forces have been altering their strike tactics, warheads, and the composition of their strike packages in order to maximize damage and disproportionately impact civilians, especially as Russia has intensified its efforts in recent months to collapse the Ukrainian energy grid,” ISW warns. And Russian officials continue to signal they are uninterested in compromising any of their initial goals with their Ukraine invasion, including giving up occupied territory. Continue reading, here

    Related reading:Europe Has Received the Message // Without America to rely on, the EU is gearing up to be a global power in its own right,” Joseph de Weck wrote Tuesday for The Atlantic. 

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  • This week in cybersecurity from the editors at Cybercrime Magazine

    Sausalito, Calif. – Feb. 18, 2026

    Read the full report in GlobeNewswire

    Cybercrime has become the world’s third-largest economy, with costs projected to reach $12.2 trillion annually by 2031, according to Cybersecurity Ventures. A new report from Huntress sheds light on the playbook used by organized, profit-driven cybercriminals, uncovering how they weaponize legitimate tools, exploit everyday behaviors, and leverage a vast underground network to exploit people, businesses, and employees across the globe.

    Key findings include:

    Remote monitoring and management (RMM) tools are cybercriminals’ new favorite weapon;

    Over half of all malware loader activity came from ClickFix;

    Time-to-ransom (TTR) rose as ransomware groups prioritized stealth, data theft, and extortion;

    Ransomware has its own big four —Akira, Medusa, Qilin, and Ransomhub— and they are dominating the market;

    Buying stolen credentials is cheaper and easier than ever;

    Mailbox manipulation and OAuth abuse set the stage for business email compromise (BEC) attacks.

    The report explains that generative AI-powered cybercrime isn’t just about smarter phishing scams anymore. It’s an underground economy, built entirely on the abuse of trust. This force multiplier puts powerful cyberattack tactics and tools in the hands of anyone, driving cybercrime to unprecedented levels of speed and sophistication.

    Read the Full Report



    Cybercrime Magazine is Page ONE for Cybersecurity. Go to any of our sections to read the latest:

    • SCAM. The latest schemes, frauds, and social engineering attacks being launched on consumers globally.
    • NEWS. Breaking coverage on cyberattacks and data breaches, and the most recent privacy and security stories.
    • HACK. Another organization gets hacked every day. We tell you who, what, where, when, and why.
    • VC. Cybersecurity venture capital deal flow with the latest investment activity from various sources around the world.
    • M&A. Cybersecurity mergers and acquisitions including big tech, pure cyber, product vendors and professional services.
    • BLOG. What’s happening at Cybercrime Magazine. Plus the stories that don’t make headlines (but maybe they should).
    • PRESS. Cybersecurity industry news and press releases in real time from the editors at Business Wire.
    • PODCAST. New episodes daily on the Cybercrime Magazine Podcast feature victims, law enforcement, vendors, and cybersecurity experts.
    • RADIO. Tune into WCYB Digital Radio at Cybercrime.Radio, the first and only round-the-clock internet radio station devoted to cybersecurity.

    Contact us to send story tips, feedback and suggestions, and for sponsorship opportunities and custom media productions.

    The post The Playbook For Organized Cybercrime appeared first on Cybercrime Magazine.

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  • OpenClaw, the open-source autonomous AI assistant that has gained widespread adoption in early 2026, released version v2026.2.17 on February 17, 2026, introducing support for Anthropic’s latest Claude Sonnet 4.6 model. The release comes amid growing security concerns after researchers documented the first in-the-wild credential theft targeting OpenClaw configuration files by infostealer malware. New Anthropic Model […]

    The post OpenClaw AI Framework v2026.2.17 Adds Anthropic Model Support Amid Credential Theft Bug Concerns appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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  • Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed multiple security vulnerabilities in four popular Microsoft Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extensions that, if successfully exploited, could allow threat actors to steal local files and execute code remotely. The extensions, which have been collectively installed more than 125 million times, are Live Server, Code Runner, Markdown Preview Enhanced, and

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  • A rising wave of cryptocurrency scams sweeping across Asia is blending two major fraud techniques malvertising and pig butchering to create a more deceptive and scalable attack model. The scams begin with malvertising, where attackers run ads impersonating well‑known financial experts or promoting AI‑powered trading platforms. These ads often seen on Facebook, Instagram, and other social media sites direct users […]

    The post Cryptocurrency Scams in Asia Combine Malvertising and Pig Butchering, Causing Losses Up to ¥10 Million appeared first on GBHackers Security | #1 Globally Trusted Cyber Security News Platform.

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