- Vitalik Buterin has warned that many AI tools could become a major privacy threat because they rely on remote infrastructure with access to user data.
- He said the risks extend beyond large language models themselves to outside services, data leaks and jailbreak attacks that can push systems against user interests.
Vitalik Buterin has raised a fresh warning about artificial intelligence, this time focusing less on hype and more on privacy.
In a new blog post, the Ethereum co-founder argued that many AI tools are built on remote infrastructure that can access sensitive user data, creating risks that most people do not fully see when they type into a chatbot, delegate a task or connect an external service. The concern, as he lays it out, is not limited to one model or one app. It is structural.
Remote AI infrastructure creates a wider privacy surface
Buterin’s point is fairly direct. A growing number of AI products rely on infrastructure that sits outside the user’s own device and outside the user’s control. That means prompts, files, account details and usage patterns can all pass through systems that may store, process or reuse the data in ways the user never intended.
He warned that the problem does not stop with large language models. External services tied into those systems can introduce their own vulnerabilities, from simple data leaks to unauthorized use of personal information. In other words, the danger is not just the model. It is the entire chain around it.
That matters because AI is increasingly being sold as an assistant layer across finance, software, communication and online identity. The more useful it becomes, the more private context it tends to absorb.
Jailbreaks turn AI from helper into a liability
Buterin also pointed to jailbreak attacks as a specific threat. These attacks use outside inputs to manipulate a model into behaving in ways that run against the user’s interests, effectively turning an assistant into something less reliable and potentially harmful.
That warning lands at a time when AI tools are moving closer to execution, not just conversation. As these systems gain access to messages, wallets, documents and automated actions, privacy failures can quickly become operational failures too.
What Buterin is really flagging here is a shift in risk. AI is no longer just a question of capability. It is becoming a question of trust boundaries, who controls the data, where the model runs, and what happens when that boundary fails.
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