Anthropic Finds 22 Firefox Vulnerabilities Using Claude Opus 4.6 AI Model
Anthropic on Friday said it discovered 22 new security vulnerabilities in the Firefox web browser as part of a security partnership with Mozilla
Stay informed on Firefox security updates, vulnerabilities, and privacy enhancements with the latest in information security news and expert analysis.
Search across headline titles and summaries.
Background for this topic.
Firefox is an open-source web browser developed by Mozilla. It executes untrusted web content using security boundaries such as the same-origin policy and sandboxing, while providing protections against deceptive sites, downloads, and unwanted tracking. Its extension system also allows third-party code to access browser data or modify pages, depending on the permissions granted.
For security teams, browser vulnerabilities matter because a malicious or compromised website can exploit flaws to achieve code execution, bypass isolation, or steal information; exploitation risk depends on the specific defect and the deployed configuration. Vulnerability management therefore includes monitoring Mozilla security advisories, testing and rapidly deploying updates, and using the Extended Support Release where its slower feature cadence suits managed environments. Administrators should control extensions, apply enterprise policies, and treat privacy settings and browsing data as part of endpoint security and incident investigation.
Anthropic on Friday said it discovered 22 new security vulnerabilities in the Firefox web browser as part of a security partnership with Mozilla
Now if only device makers would deliver higher quality components Thanks to Anthropic's AI and its bug-detecting abilities, Firefox users can now enjoy stronger security. Unfortunately, if browser crashes rather than security flaws are the problem, Claude probably can't help.…
PLUS: Firefox adds XSS protection; Leadership turnover at CISA; FTC exempts some data collection Infosec In Brief DNS vulnerabilities are being addressed 84 percent faster in the UK public sector thanks to an automated vulnerability scanning system established as part of a program kicked off early last year.…