Hackers have finally made sophisticated AI generated malware – this AI virus was functional in a matter of days and mimicked the work of a three dev teams working 50 hours a week
VoidLink used an AI agent for most of its development
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
You are now subscribed
Your newsletter sign-up was successful
Join the club
Get full access to premium articles, exclusive features and a growing list of member rewards.
- VoidLink was created by a single developer using an AI agent
- The AI agent used skeleton code and guidelines to create complex malware
- Code development was split between three AI 'teams'
A new malware strain which shows evidence of being largely developed using AI has been discovered, potentially ushering in a worrying new era of cybercrime.
Check Point Research spotted and investigated VoidLink, and found it to be highly sophisticated, marking a stark change from other malware developed using AI, which are often derived from existing malware and are usually inferior.
AI is helping malware rapidly evolve
VoidLink’s development mimicked the work of a full development team. The lead developer started with a codebase and guidelines which were fed into an AI agent. The AI agent was then tasked with creating separate project specifications for development, coding, and architecture using a specific coding rulebook of guidelines and constraints.
Article continues belowThe developer specified that no code was to be implemented by the agent at first. Only once the initial plans were completed did the developer allow the AI agent to deliver an execution plan for the development of VoidLink.
While evidence gathered from the source code suggests that VoidLink was intended to be a 30-week project, a test artefact suggests that VoidLink was already functional within one week of development, and had amassed 88,000 lines of code.
VoidLink differs significantly from previous examples of AI-assisted malware development which have typically been performed by threat actors with less experience. VoidLink clearly demonstrates that experienced developers can create sophisticated and highly capable malware in very short timeframes.
While VoidLink isn’t a fully AI generated malware, it is certainly evidence that we see complex malware being developed autonomously by AI agents sooner rather than later.
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!

➡️ Read our full guide to the best antivirus
1. Best overall:
Bitdefender Total Security
2. Best for families:
Norton 360 with LifeLock
3. Best for mobile:
McAfee Mobile Security

Benedict is a Senior Security Writer at TechRadar Pro, where he has specialized in covering the intersection of geopolitics, cyber-warfare, and business security.
Benedict provides detailed analysis on state-sponsored threat actors, APT groups, and the protection of critical national infrastructure, with his reporting bridging the gap between technical threat intelligence and B2B security strategy.
Benedict holds an MA (Distinction) in Security, Intelligence, and Diplomacy from the University of Buckingham Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies (BUCSIS), with his specialization providing him with a robust academic framework for deconstructing complex international conflicts and intelligence operations, and the ability to translate intricate security data into actionable insights.
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.