Wall Street Journal ·

Researchers say Z.ai's GLM-5.2 matches latest US models at finding security bugs, as critics question the US' lax approach in restricting Chinese open models

Clampdown on top U.S. artificial intelligence is fueling concern that Washington is handing Beijing a cyberwarfare advantage

Researchers say Z.ai's GLM-5.2 matches latest US models at finding security bugs, as critics question the US' lax approach in restricting Chinese open models

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China's GLM-5.2 Matches US AI Models at Finding Security Bugs

Z.ai's open model rivals top American AI in vulnerability detection, raising questions about US export control strategy.

Z.ai's GLM-5.2 is now going toe-to-toe with the best American AI models when it comes to hunting down security vulnerabilities. Researchers have confirmed the Chinese open model matches its US counterparts in finding bugs — and that's making a lot of people in Washington uncomfortable.

The problem? US restrictions have focused heavily on clamping down on top domestic AI, while Chinese open-weight models like GLM-5.2 remain largely unrestricted. Critics argue this lopsided approach effectively hands Beijing a cyberwarfare advantage.

The Wall Street Journal reports growing concern that Washington's export control strategy has a gaping blind spot. By limiting American AI capabilities while doing little to curb the spread of increasingly powerful Chinese open models, the US may be undermining its own security position.

The cybersecurity implications are hard to ignore. Bug-finding AI is a dual-use tool — great for defense, devastating for offense.