Skip to main content Scroll Top

The Pentagon Is Spending Millions On AI Hackers

WHY THIS MATTERS IN BRIEF

State-funded autonomous cyber-offence signals an arms race where attacks run continuously at machine speed across thousands of targets.

 

Matthew Griffin is the World’s #1 Futurist Keynote Speaker and Global Advisor for the G7 and Fortune 500, specialising in exponential disruption across 100 countries. Book a Keynote or Advisory SessionJoin 1M+ followers on YouTube and explore his 15-book Codex of the Future series.

 


 

The U.S. is quietly investing in AI agents for cyberwarfare, spending millions this year on a secretive startup that’s using AI for offensive cyberattacks on American enemies.

 

RELATED
Cornell's AI uses vibrations to instantly turn your dumb home into a smart home

 

According to federal contracting records, a stealth, Arlington, Virginia-based startup called Twenty, or XX, signed a contract with the U.S. Cyber Command this summer worth up to $12.6 million. It scored a $240,000 research contract with the U.S. Navy, too. The company has received VC support from In-Q-Tel, the nonprofit venture capital organisation founded by the CIA, as well as Caffeinated Capital and General Catalyst. Twenty couldn’t be reached for comment at the time of publication.

Twenty’s contracts are a rare case of an AI offensive cyber company with VC backing landing Cyber Command work; typically cyber contracts have gone to either small bespoke companies or to the old guard of defence contracting like Booz Allen Hamilton or L3Harris.

 

The Future of Cyber and European Security Keynote | Fortinet, Norway | Matt Griffin | Cyber Futurist, by Futurist Keynote Speaker Matthew Griffin

Book a Keynote with Matthew

Though the firm hasn’t launched publicly yet, its website states its focus is “transforming workflows that once took weeks of manual effort into automated, continuous operations across hundreds of targets simultaneously.” Twenty claims it is “fundamentally reshaping how the U.S. and its allies engage in cyber conflict.”

 

RELATED
Scientists have created the world's best and biggest 3D living hologram

 

Its job ads reveal more. In one, Twenty is seeking a director of offensive cyber research, who will develop “advanced offensive cyber capabilities including attack path frameworks… and AI-powered automation tools.” AI engineer job ads indicate Twenty will be deploying open source tools like CrewAI, which is used to manage multiple autonomous AI agents that collaborate. And an analyst role says the company will be working on “persona development.” Often, government cyberattacks use social engineering, relying on convincing fake online accounts to infiltrate enemy communities and networks.

Twenty’s executive team, according to its website, is stacked with former military and intelligence agents. CEO and cofounder Joe Lin is a former U.S. Navy Reserve officer who was previously VP of product management at cyber giant Palo Alto Networks. He joined Palo Alto after the firm acquired , where he helped national security clients determine where their networks were vulnerable. CTO Leo Olson also worked on the national security team at Expanse and was a signals intelligence officer at the U.S. Army. VP of engineering Skyler Onken spent over a decade at U.S. Cyber Command and the U.S. Army. The startup’s head of government relations, Adam Howard, spent years on the Hill, most recently working on the National Security Council transition team for the incoming Trump administration.

The U.S. government isn’t the only country using AI to build out its hacking capabilities. Last week, AI giant Anthropic released some : Chinese hackers were using its tools to carry out cyberattacks. The company said hackers had deployed Claude to spin up AI agents to do 90% of the work on scouting out targets and coming up with ideas on how to hack them.

It’s possible the U.S. could also be using OpenAI, Anthropic or Elon Musk’s xAI in offensive cyber operations. The Defence Department gave each company contracts worth up to $200 million for unspecified “frontier AI” projects. None have confirmed what they’re working on for the DOD.

 

RELATED
Scientists stored a movie inside a living bacteria, then replayed it

 

Given its focus on simultaneous attacks on hundreds of targets, Twenty’s products appear to be a step up in terms of cyberwarfare automation.

By contrast, beltway contractor Two Six Technologies has received a number of contracts in the AI offensive cyber space, including one for $90 million in 2020, but its tools are mostly to assist humans rather than replace them. For the last six years, it’s been working on developing automated AI “to assist cyber battlespace” and “support development of cyber warfare strategies” under a project dubbed IKE. its AI was allowed to press ahead with carrying out an attack if the chances of success were high. The contract value was ramped up to $190 million by 2024, but there’s no indication IKE uses agents to carry out operations at the scale that Twenty is claiming.

 


 

What is the Pentagon buying from Twenty?
Twenty is building autonomous AI agents that automate offensive cyber operations across hundreds of targets at once, under contracts with US Cyber Command and the Navy.

Related Posts

Leave a comment

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This