InsighthubNews
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Celebrity
  • Environment
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Crypto
  • Sports
  • Gaming
Reading: GPT-5 agent that automatically detects and fixes code defects
Share
Font ResizerAa
InsighthubNewsInsighthubNews
Search
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Celebrity
  • Environment
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Crypto
  • Sports
  • Gaming
© 2024 All Rights Reserved | Powered by Insighthub News
InsighthubNews > Technology > GPT-5 agent that automatically detects and fixes code defects
Technology

GPT-5 agent that automatically detects and fixes code defects

October 31, 2025 3 Min Read
Share

OpenAI has announced the launch of an “Agent Security Researcher” that leverages the GPT-5 Large-Scale Language Model (LLM) and is programmed to emulate human experts who can scan, understand, and patch code.

called aardvarkThe artificial intelligence (AI) company said its autonomous agents are designed to help developers and security teams report and remediate security vulnerabilities at scale. Currently available as a private beta.

“Aardvark continuously analyzes source code repositories to identify vulnerabilities, assess exploitability, prioritize severity, and recommend targeted patches,” OpenAI said.

It works by embedding itself into the software development pipeline, monitoring commits and changes to the codebase, detecting security issues and how they can be exploited, and suggesting fixes to address the issues using LLM-based reasoning and tooling.

Powering this agent is GPT‑5, which OpenAI introduced in August 2025. The company describes it as a “smart, efficient model” that features deeper inference capabilities with GPT‑5 thinking and a “real-time router” that determines the appropriate model to use based on conversation type, complexity, and user intent.

OpenAI says Aardvark analyzes a project’s codebase and generates a threat model that it believes best represents its security goals and design. Using this contextual foundation, the agent not only scans the history to identify existing issues, but also scrutinizes changes received in the repository to detect new issues.

Once we find a potential security flaw, we trigger it in an isolated sandbox environment to check for exploitability and leverage our coding agent, OpenAI Codex, to create a patch that can be reviewed by human analysts.

OpenAI said the agent runs on OpenAI’s internal codebase and some external alpha partners and has helped identify at least 10 CVEs in open source projects.

See also  Zero-click agent browser attack could delete entire Google Drive using crafted email

AI startups aren’t the only companies experimenting with AI agents to tackle automated vulnerability detection and patching. Earlier this month, Google announced CodeMender, which detects, patches, and rewrites vulnerable code to prevent future exploits. The tech giant also said it intends to work with maintainers of important open source projects to integrate CodeMender-generated patches to ensure their projects are secure.

From that perspective, Aardvark, CodeMender, and XBOW are positioned as tools for continuous code analysis, exploit verification, and patch generation. It also comes close to the release of OpenAI’s gpt-oss-safeguard model, which is fine-tuned for safety classification tasks.

“Aardvark represents a new defender-first model, with agent-based security researchers partnering with teams to provide continuous protection as their code evolves,” OpenAI said. “By discovering vulnerabilities early, verifying real-world exploitability, and providing clear fixes, Aardvark can strengthen security without slowing innovation. We believe we can expand access to security expertise.”

Share This Article
Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Get a free Steam key for Brotato and the popular roguelike's must-play DLC Get a free Steam key for Brotato and the popular roguelike’s must-play DLC
Next Article Proposition 50 could disenfranchise Republican voters in California. Will it survive legal challenges? Proposition 50 could disenfranchise Republican voters in California. Will it survive legal challenges?

You Might Also Like

India orders messaging apps to work only with active SIM cards to prevent fraud and abuse
Technology

India orders messaging apps to work only with active SIM cards to prevent fraud and abuse

4 Min Read
Critical WSUS Vulnerability
Technology

Critical, newly patched Microsoft WSUS flaw exploited

6 Min Read
Featured Chrome Browser Extension
Technology

A popular Chrome browser extension was found to be eavesdropping on the AI ​​chats of millions of users

7 Min Read
ASD warns of ongoing BADCANDY attack exploiting Cisco IOS XE vulnerability
Technology

ASD warns of ongoing BADCANDY attack exploiting Cisco IOS XE vulnerability

3 Min Read
InsighthubNews
InsighthubNews

Welcome to InsighthubNews, your reliable source for the latest updates and in-depth insights from around the globe. We are dedicated to bringing you up-to-the-minute news and analysis on the most pressing issues and developments shaping the world today.

  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • Environment
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Celebrity
  • Environment
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Crypto
  • Sports
  • Gaming
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Gaming
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2024 All Rights Reserved | Powered by Insighthub News

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?