
Tech • IA • Crypto
OpenAI has launched GPT‑5.5 Cyber and a broader Daybreak initiative, claiming top benchmark performance while shifting focus from finding vulnerabilities to fixing them at scale.
GPT‑5.5 Cyber scored 85.6% on Cyber Gym, surpassing Anthropic’s Mythos 5 at 83.8% and standard GPT‑5.5 at 81.8%. Additional tests showed gains in exploit generation and long-horizon vulnerability discovery, reinforcing OpenAI’s position in the escalating AI cybersecurity race.
The initiative emphasizes that identifying bugs is no longer the bottleneck. AI systems can now scan vast codebases, trace attack paths, and reproduce vulnerabilities faster than teams can respond. The central challenge has shifted to validating, prioritizing, and patching issues before they are exploited.
GPT‑5.5 Cyber is not सार्वजनिकly available. Access is limited to vetted defenders under strict monitoring, scope controls, and human oversight. The model is also designed to reduce unnecessary refusals in legitimate security workflows, enabling professionals to test and secure systems more effectively.
The model can analyze large repositories, identify reachable vulnerabilities, validate findings in controlled environments, generate patches, and prepare evidence for review. This positions it as a tool for full-cycle remediation rather than a simple vulnerability scanner.
OpenAI reports that Codeex Security has scanned over 30 million commits across 30,000+ repositories. More than 70,000 issues were manually confirmed as fixed, with over 500,000 automatically resolved. The updated system integrates threat modeling, validation, and patch generation directly into developer workflows.
A new program led with Trail of Bits, HackerOne, and others aims to help maintainers of widely used open-source projects move from vulnerability reports to verified fixes. Early efforts uncovered hundreds of issues and produced dozens of merged patches across projects like cURL, Python, and Go.
Research shows 94% of widely used open-source projects rely on fewer than 10 developers for most contributions. AI-driven bug discovery risks overwhelming these teams with duplicate or low-quality reports, making curated validation and funded expert support essential.
The Daybreak Cyber Partner Program includes firms such as Cisco, Cloudflare, CrowdStrike, IBM, and Palo Alto Networks, enabling controlled integration into security products. OpenAI is also coordinating with governments and critical infrastructure operators across the U.S., EU, UK, Japan, and others.
OpenAI’s Daybreak strategy signals a shift in AI cybersecurity from discovering vulnerabilities to systematically fixing them, with success likely determined by real-world remediation speed rather than benchmark scores.