HMRC Deploys British AI To Hunt Tax Fraud
HMRC is handing a British AI company £175 million to help it spot tax fraud, uncover hidden financial networks, reduce costly mistakes, and improve customer service, as pressure mounts over rising complaints, growing complexity, and a £46.8 billion tax gap.
Deal With Quantexa
The decade-long deal with London-based AI and analytics firm Quantexa marks one of the largest AI deployments ever seen inside the UK public sector. It also signals a major strategic change in how the government wants critical public systems to use artificial intelligence.
Rather than relying on a US technology giant, HMRC is betting heavily on a British-developed “Decision Intelligence” platform designed to connect fragmented data, identify suspicious patterns, and support human investigators and customer service teams.
Why HMRC Wants AI Help
HMRC has been under mounting criticism for years over long waits, processing delays, incorrect tax notices, and declining service standards.
According to figures obtained through Freedom of Information requests by the Contentious Tax Group, complaints against HMRC climbed to more than 93,000 in 2024/25, up sharply from around 70,000 five years earlier.
Also, compensation payments linked to HMRC errors and distress have also risen significantly.
At the same time, the tax authority is handling growing volumes of digital data as initiatives like Making Tax Digital expand across the UK economy.
It seems the problem for HMRC is not a lack of information, but that the information often sits in disconnected systems that can’t easily “see” relationships between people, companies, transactions, and behaviours.
Quantexa specialises in connecting fragmented datasets and using graph analytics and machine learning to identify patterns, relationships, and anomalies that would be extremely difficult for human investigators to spot manually across millions of disconnected records and transactions.
Its technology was originally developed for anti-money laundering work inside banks. Customers already include HSBC and Vodafone.
Now HMRC wants to apply similar techniques to tax compliance, fraud detection, and operational efficiency.
Connecting The Dots
One of the most significant parts of the project involves what Quantexa calls “entity resolution”. In simple terms, the system attempts to identify when multiple records, companies, transactions, or identities may actually be connected.
That matters because complex fraud networks often hide behind layers of shell companies, false references, mismatched addresses, or disconnected records spread across multiple databases.
The technology is designed to create what Quantexa describes as “a clearer, connected view of its data to improve performance, help identify tax at risk, and strengthen control.”
Positive Points
One positive point about the new system is that it should be able to help HMRC track legitimate payments that have been incorrectly referenced, which could potentially reduce some of the administrative headaches faced by businesses and taxpayers.
Also, importantly, Quantexa says the platform is not intended to replace human decision-making. As Quantexa CEO Vishal Marria says: “In government environments, AI cannot operate as a black box,” and that “Decisions need to be transparent, auditable, and explainable, particularly in areas affecting citizens directly.”
In fact, this point matters politically as much as technically. For example, governments worldwide are increasingly nervous about allowing opaque AI systems to make decisions affecting taxes, benefits, healthcare, or policing without clear accountability.
The Digital Sovereignty Angle
There is another layer to this story that goes well beyond tax collection. The Quantexa deal is being viewed inside government as part of a wider push towards so-called “digital sovereignty”.
In recent years, the UK government has awarded huge contracts to American data firms including Palantir Technologies, the US data analytics company co-founded by billionaire Peter Thiel, whose NHS data platform deal generated considerable political controversy.
This time, ministers appear keen to emphasise that the supplier is British, the systems are governed, and the data stays under HMRC control.
Also, Quantexa’s online announcement about the deal with HMRC strongly emphasised sovereignty and governance concerns, with Quantexa highlighting how “Public sector organisations are accelerating digital transformation while needing to maintain sovereignty, auditability and control.”
It added that the platform creates “a trusted, governed foundation for advanced analytics and the safe deployment of AI at scale.”
The language used around the project is deliberate because governments are no longer debating simply whether AI can improve public services, they are increasingly focused on who controls the systems, where sensitive national data is stored, and whether automated decisions can be properly explained, audited, and challenged when citizens are affected.
A Major Test For Government AI
The contract could become a defining test case for how AI is used across British government departments. If successful, similar approaches could spread rapidly into compliance, policing, border control, welfare systems, and other high-data public services.
However, the pressure to deliver will be intense because HMRC’s tax gap currently stands at £46.8 billion, representing money theoretically owed but not collected, and the government is clearly placing significant faith in AI and Quantexa’s ability to help recover far more of it. Quantexa founder and CEO Vishal Marria says governments worldwide are struggling with “how to turn complex, fragmented data into confident, timely decisions”, which goes directly to the heart of HMRC’s long-running problems with disconnected systems, slow processes, and rising operational complexity. The company believes that by “creating context from data and embedding trusted, governed AI”, HMRC will be able to make “confident, informed decisions” more quickly, while improving fraud detection, strengthening oversight, and reducing the kinds of administrative errors that have increasingly damaged public confidence in the tax authority.
What Does This Mean For Your Business?
For businesses, accountants, and taxpayers, this signals a future where HMRC becomes far more data-driven, interconnected, and AI-assisted. That could mean faster identification of fraud and errors, quicker handling of customer queries, and improved detection of suspicious tax activity.
It could also mean increased scrutiny. As AI systems become better at linking records and spotting inconsistencies across datasets, businesses may find it harder to hide mistakes, discrepancies, or unusual financial behaviour inside disconnected systems.
At the same time, the project highlights something much bigger happening across the UK economy. Artificial intelligence is rapidly moving beyond chatbots and productivity tools into core national infrastructure, including taxation, compliance, and public administration.
It now seems that businesses that maintain accurate records, consistent reporting, and well-organised financial systems are likely to face far fewer problems in an environment where AI is increasingly being used to connect data, identify anomalies, and scrutinise tax activity far more efficiently than before.
Google Replaces Chromebook With AI-Powered “Googlebook” Strategy
Google has unveiled a radical new laptop strategy that replaces the Chromebook concept with AI-first “Googlebooks”, devices where Gemini AI is embedded directly into the operating system and even the cursor itself becomes an intelligent assistant.
AI As The Core Layer
The move represents one of the clearest signs yet that major technology companies no longer see AI as simply another app or feature, but increasingly as the core layer through which users interact with computers altogether.
A Big Change For Google’s Laptop Strategy
For more than 15 years, Google’s Chromebook strategy focused on lightweight, low-cost laptops built around the Chrome browser and cloud services.
Now Google says the industry is moving “from an operating system to an intelligence system”, and believes laptops need to be redesigned around AI itself.
The result is Googlebook, a new category of premium laptops built on Android rather than ChromeOS, with Gemini deeply integrated into the entire experience.
According to Google, the devices are “the first laptops designed from the ground up for Gemini Intelligence, to deliver personal and proactive help when and where you need it.”
That wording matters because Google is no longer positioning AI as a separate assistant sitting beside applications. Instead, AI is becoming the interface itself.
The Cursor Becomes The AI
Perhaps the most striking feature is something called “Magic Pointer”, developed with Google DeepMind.
Google says the feature “brings Gemini’s helpfulness right to your fingertips” by turning the cursor into a context-aware AI agent capable of understanding what is on screen and proactively suggesting actions.
For example, hovering over a date inside an email could trigger an option to create a meeting automatically. Pointing at two images could allow Gemini to combine them instantly, and highlighting text could trigger summarisation, rewriting, or translation suggestions.
Importantly, the system is designed to work proactively rather than waiting for typed prompts.
Google says users can “wiggle your cursor and watch it come alive with Gemini, offering quick, contextual suggestions every time you point at something on your screen.”
That may sound like a relatively small interface change, but strategically it is extremely significant.
For decades, the cursor has simply been a pointing mechanism, but now it seems Google is effectively turning it into an AI interaction layer that constantly interprets context and anticipates actions.
Strategically Different To Competitors
This also represents a noticeably different strategy from rivals like Microsoft and Apple. For example, Microsoft largely places Copilot alongside applications, while Apple has focused heavily on embedding intelligence into individual apps and workflows. Google, by contrast, appears to be positioning Gemini as the layer sitting between the user and the entire operating system.
Unifying Android And AI
The launch also attempts to solve a long-running Google problem. Traditional Chromebooks could run Android apps, but often through compatibility layers and container systems that created limitations around multitasking, file access, and desktop integration.
Googlebook removes that separation entirely because the laptops themselves now run Android-based software natively.
Google says this allows users to move more seamlessly between phones and laptops while sharing apps, files, AI services, and workflows across devices.
Features such as “Quick Access” will reportedly allow users to browse and use phone files directly from their laptop without transfers, while “Cast my Apps” will let Android phone apps appear directly on the laptop screen.
Google describes the overall goal as “keeping you in the flow”, especially as people increasingly move between multiple connected devices throughout the day.
The company is also introducing “Create your Widget”, where users describe a dashboard or widget in natural language and Gemini builds it automatically using information pulled from services like Gmail, Calendar, and web search.
In practical terms, users are increasingly being asked not to choose software from menus, but instead describe what they want AI to create for them dynamically.
A Premium AI Device
One of the most surprising aspects of the announcement is Google’s decision to move away from the Chromebook market’s traditional low-cost positioning.
Googlebook devices are being described as premium products with “premium craftsmanship and materials”, launching through partners including Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP, and Lenovo. This could create important questions for education markets where Chromebooks became dominant largely because they were cheap, simple, and easy to manage.
Chromebooks currently hold a huge share of the global education laptop market, particularly in the US, and Google says existing devices will continue receiving support for now.
However, the long-term direction does seem to be becoming clearer, with Google now appearing to see Gemini itself as the core product, with the laptop becoming just the delivery mechanism for AI-powered experiences across Google’s wider ecosystem.
What Does This Mean For Your Business?
For businesses, Googlebook is another strong signal that the next phase of computing may revolve less around applications and more around AI-mediated workflows and interfaces.
The bigger story here is not simply a new laptop category. It is that major technology firms are redesigning operating systems, interfaces, and entire ecosystems around context-aware AI systems that attempt to anticipate user intent in real time.
That could eventually change how employees interact with software altogether, particularly in areas like administration, scheduling, document handling, collaboration, and workflow automation.
This also raises important questions around privacy, regulation, AI dependency, cloud processing costs, and how much contextual access businesses are comfortable giving AI systems embedded deeply inside everyday devices.
Google’s original Chromebook strategy argued that the browser was becoming the operating system. Googlebook now suggests the company believes AI itself may become the operating system instead.
NHS Broadens Contractor Access To Patient Data
Fresh controversy has erupted around the NHS Federated Data Platform after reports claimed Palantir contractors and other external staff could be granted much broader access to identifiable patient data inside one of the NHS’s most sensitive systems.
What’s Happening To Our Health Data?
According to a recent report in the Financial Times, NHS England has approved the creation of a new administrative access role inside its National Data Integration Tenant, or NDIT, which sits at the heart of the NHS Federated Data Platform (FDP).
The NDIT is effectively a controlled environment where identifiable patient data is held before information is pseudonymised and distributed into other operational systems connected to the FDP.
Until now, external personnel working on the platform reportedly had to apply for access to specific datasets individually through what NHS England calls Controlled Data Access requests.
However, it’s been reported that leaked internal briefing documents argued that the process had become operationally difficult and time-consuming, particularly given the scale and complexity of the FDP programme.
As a result, NHS England has reportedly approved a broader “admin” role allowing a small number of approved non-NHS personnel to access data inside the NDIT without repeated case-by-case approvals.
Some critics are even describing the arrangement as effectively creating “unlimited access” for contractors inside part of the NHS’s flagship data infrastructure project.
NHS England has strongly pushed back against suggestions that controls are being weakened, saying the organisation maintains “strict policies in place for managing access to patient data” and carries out “regular audits to ensure compliance”, while also stressing that any external access requires government security clearance and director-level approval.
What Is The Federated Data Platform?
The FDP is one of the NHS’s largest digital transformation projects. The £330 million contract was awarded in 2023 to a consortium led by Palantir Technologies, a US data analytics company best known for its work in defence, intelligence, security, and large-scale data integration.
The platform is designed to connect fragmented NHS operational datasets into a unified system intended to improve waiting list management, resource allocation, planning, and operational efficiency.
NHS England argues the FDP will help modernise healthcare operations and improve patient outcomes by allowing NHS organisations to use data more effectively across trusts and services.
The NHS also insists that patient data remains under NHS control at all times, with Palantir legally acting only as a “data processor” operating under NHS instructions.
Who Are Palantir And Peter Thiel?
Much of the controversy surrounding the FDP stems not simply from the technology itself, but from Palantir’s wider reputation and affiliations.
Palantir Technologies was co-founded in 2003 by billionaire investor Peter Thiel alongside executives linked to PayPal and US intelligence circles.
Thiel is one of Silicon Valley’s most influential and controversial figures. He was an early Facebook investor, co-founder of PayPal, and has longstanding links to conservative US political movements and defence technology investment.
Palantir itself originally built software for US intelligence and military agencies following the September 11 attacks and has since expanded heavily into defence, immigration enforcement, policing, and government analytics worldwide.
The company has worked with organisations including the CIA, FBI, Pentagon, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), NATO, and multiple Western defence agencies.
Critics argue that background makes Palantir an uncomfortable fit for handling sensitive NHS infrastructure and patient data, particularly given growing public concern about AI, surveillance, and data concentration inside critical public services.
Supporters, however, argue that Palantir specialises precisely in the kind of large-scale data integration and operational analytics the NHS badly needs.
Why This Matters Politically
The latest reports have reignited long-running concerns from privacy campaigners, MPs, and patient rights groups who argue the NHS risks eroding public confidence if governance boundaries become unclear.
The leaked NHS briefing itself reportedly acknowledged “considerable public interest and concern” around how much access Palantir staff may have to NHS patient data.
Labour MP Rachael Maskell has described the latest development as “dangerous”, while patient advocacy groups questioned why patients had not been more directly consulted.
At the centre of the debate is a broader tension facing governments worldwide.
Modern AI systems and advanced analytics often work best when large datasets can be integrated, connected, and analysed centrally. However, the more powerful and interconnected those systems become, the greater the concerns around access control, oversight, accountability, and misuse.
The NHS insists safeguards remain in place, including role-based access controls, UK-only data storage, security clearances, auditing, and contractual restrictions preventing Palantir from commercialising NHS data or training AI models on it. However, critics argue the issue is increasingly about trust as much as technical controls.
What Does This Mean For Your Business?
For businesses and organisations, the controversy highlights how rapidly debates around AI, analytics, and data governance are moving from technical discussions into questions of trust, transparency, and public legitimacy.
The NHS FDP project also demonstrates how AI and large-scale analytics are increasingly becoming embedded inside critical national infrastructure rather than remaining standalone software tools.
Many organisations are now facing similar tensions themselves, i.e., balancing operational efficiency, automation, and AI capability against privacy concerns, governance expectations, supplier concentration risks, and reputational exposure.
The Palantir row may ultimately become less about one NHS contract and more about how comfortable people are with huge global technology corporations having access to highly sensitive personal health information, particularly as AI-driven systems become more deeply embedded inside essential public services and everyday decision-making.
AI Memory Chip Survives Temperatures Hotter Than Molten Lava
Researchers at the University of Southern California have developed a memristor memory device capable of operating at 700°C, a temperature hotter than molten lava and beyond the surface conditions found on Venus.
Why This Matters
The breakthrough is important not simply because of the extreme temperatures involved, but because it points towards a new generation of AI hardware designed to operate in environments where conventional computing systems quickly fail.
It also highlights how memristors, a type of electronic component that can both store data and process information in the same location, have long been viewed as an experimental technology but may finally be moving towards real-world commercial deployment inside AI infrastructure, industrial systems, defence platforms, and autonomous machines.
What The Researchers Built
The research, published in ‘Science’, focused on a type of electronic component called a memristor, a device capable of storing memory and performing computation in the same location.
This matters because conventional computing systems separate processing and memory physically, forcing data to move constantly between processors and storage. This creates major energy, speed, and heat limitations, particularly for AI workloads.
Memristors attempt to solve that problem by combining storage and processing together, making them particularly attractive for AI inference and neuromorphic computing systems designed to mimic aspects of the human brain.
The USC team demonstrated that their graphene-based memristor continued operating reliably at temperatures up to 700°C. The devices also survived more than one billion switching cycles at those temperatures while maintaining stable resistance states.
Professor J. Joshua Yang from USC said in the university’s announcement: “This work establishes a pathway toward electronics capable of operating in extreme environments previously inaccessible to conventional semiconductor systems.”
How They Solved The Heat Problem
One of the biggest technical challenges involved preventing tungsten atoms from diffusing through the device structure at high temperatures. Traditional memristors often fail in this area because heat causes conductive materials to migrate uncontrollably inside the memory layer, eventually destroying the device.
The USC researchers solved much of this problem using multilayer graphene electrodes that dramatically slowed tungsten diffusion. As their supplementary paper explains: “W atoms diffuse more easily on the Pt (111) surface compared to Gra surface”, referring to graphene.
The researchers also concluded that “regardless of graphene thickness, W adatom adsorption remains weak and surface diffusion is intrinsically slow on graphene.”
In simple terms, the graphene acted as an ultra-stable barrier layer that prevented the internal structure from degrading under extreme heat.
The paper also noted that “solving W diffusion issue is the key for HT memristors”, referring to high-temperature operation.
Why TetraMem Matters
The commercial significance of the story comes from TetraMem, the startup helping commercialise the underlying technology. TetraMem is developing analogue AI inference chips based on memristor architectures designed to process AI workloads far more efficiently than conventional digital processors.
Unlike many experimental semiconductor breakthroughs that remain trapped inside laboratories, TetraMem says it has already moved room-temperature versions of its inference chips onto 300mm semiconductor production wafers in partnership with SK hynix and NY CREATES, with support linked to the US CHIPS Act.
That matters because 300mm wafers are the standard used in advanced commercial semiconductor manufacturing.
In a company statement, TetraMem CEO Guangyu Xu said: “This breakthrough validates the robustness of our memristor technology platform and opens the door to AI computing in some of the harshest environments imaginable.”
The company believes memristor systems could dramatically reduce the energy demands of AI inference while enabling far smaller and more efficient edge AI devices.
An Important Change In AI Hardware
The timing of this announcement is important because AI infrastructure is becoming increasingly constrained by energy consumption, heat generation, memory bottlenecks, and scaling limitations. Large language models and AI agents require enormous quantities of data movement between processors and memory, which consumes huge amounts of electricity.
Memristor-based systems could potentially reduce those inefficiencies significantly by processing information directly where it is stored. That could become particularly valuable for edge AI systems operating in remote or hostile environments where power, cooling, and maintenance are severely limited.
Possible future applications could include spacecraft, geothermal drilling systems, industrial robotics, autonomous military platforms, high-temperature manufacturing, nuclear facilities, and even future Venus exploration missions.
Importantly, this also reflects a broader change taking place across the semiconductor industry.
For years, AI progress largely depended on scaling conventional GPUs and cloud infrastructure. Increasingly, researchers are now looking towards entirely new memory architectures, analogue computing approaches, and neuromorphic hardware designs to overcome the physical and economic limits of traditional systems.
What Does This Mean For Your Business?
For businesses, the breakthrough is another sign that the next wave of AI competition may depend as much on hardware innovation as software models.
The wider significance here is not simply a chip surviving extreme temperatures. It is that memristor computing, long viewed as an experimental concept, is now beginning to move closer towards industrial-scale manufacturing and commercial AI deployment.
That could eventually reshape sectors ranging from industrial automation and aerospace to defence, logistics, infrastructure monitoring, and autonomous systems.
It also reinforces how AI infrastructure itself is rapidly becoming a major strategic battleground, with governments, semiconductor firms, and startups all racing to develop hardware that is faster, more energy efficient, and capable of operating in environments where conventional computing struggles or fails entirely.
Company Check : Anthropic Targets Small Businesses With Plug-And-Play AI
Anthropic is making a major push into the small business market with a new set of AI-powered tools designed to automate everyday operational tasks for companies that lack dedicated IT teams or enterprise AI budgets.
Why Anthropic Is Targeting Small Businesses
The move reflects a growing battle among AI firms to move beyond large enterprise customers and embed AI directly into the daily workflows of smaller businesses.
Anthropic says small businesses account for “44 per cent of U.S. GDP and employ nearly half the private-sector workforce”, yet AI adoption among smaller firms has remained relatively slow because many tools are still too complex, fragmented, or technical for non-specialist users.
The company says its new “Claude for Small Business” package is specifically designed for “those who have historically been last in line for new technology.”
Rather than requiring businesses to build AI systems from scratch, Anthropic is attempting to offer something much simpler, i.e., pre-built workflows that plug directly into software many smaller companies already use.
How The System Works
The system runs through Claude Cowork inside Anthropic’s desktop application.
Users can install the package with what Anthropic describes as “one toggle”, then connect services including QuickBooks, PayPal, HubSpot, Canva, DocuSign, Google Workspace, and Microsoft 365.
From there, Claude can carry out a wide range of business tasks using natural language instructions.
Anthropic says the package includes 15 “ready-to-run agentic workflows” covering areas such as finance, operations, sales, HR, marketing, and customer service, alongside another 15 reusable “skills” built around repetitive small business tasks.
Examples include generating payroll forecasts, chasing overdue invoices, reconciling accounts, preparing tax information, summarising contracts, cleaning up CRM databases, reviewing customer complaints, building marketing campaigns, and generating weekly business briefings.
Anthropic says users remain in control throughout the process, explaining that “Claude does the work; you approve before anything sends, posts, or pays.”
One example described by the company involves Claude comparing QuickBooks cash positions against incoming PayPal settlements, identifying overdue invoices, drafting reminder emails, and preparing a 30-day cash forecast automatically.
Another workflow analyses sales trends inside HubSpot before generating promotional campaigns and marketing assets through Canva.
The Bigger AI Strategy
The launch is important because it signals a major strategic change in how AI companies increasingly see the future of AI adoption.
For the past two years, much of the public AI discussion has focused heavily on chatbots and content generation. Increasingly, however, major AI firms are trying to position AI as an operational layer running quietly across existing business systems.
Anthropic is effectively attempting to turn Claude into a lightweight operational assistant embedded inside finance, administration, sales, and customer service processes.
That approach may prove particularly attractive for smaller businesses that often lack specialist staff across accounting, marketing, operations, compliance, and IT functions.
Anthropic co-founder Daniela Amodei said: “AI is the first technology that can finally close that gap,” referring to the historic resource imbalance between large enterprises and smaller firms.
She also said the goal is for Claude to “take on the work that piles up after hours”, while “people run the business.”
Importantly, Anthropic is also trying to lower the adoption barrier through training and education rather than technology alone.
The company has launched a free “AI Fluency for Small Business” course in partnership with PayPal, alongside live training events across US cities designed to help business owners understand how AI tools can actually fit into daily operations safely and realistically.
The Data Privacy Question
However, the launch also raises important questions around business data privacy and AI training practices. For example, although Anthropic says: “We don’t train on your data by default on our Team and Enterprise Plans”, some critics have highlighted how the company’s Pro and Max plans appear to operate differently under default settings unless users manually opt out of data usage for model improvement.
Anthropic’s own privacy wording for those plans states: “We will use your chats and coding sessions (including to improve our models).”
The company also notes that while raw connector data is not directly used for training, information copied into conversations with Claude may potentially become part of model improvement processes depending on account settings.
That distinction matters because many small businesses may not fully understand the differences between plan tiers, connector permissions, data flows, and AI training policies when deploying these systems across sensitive operational workflows.
Why This Matters
The wider significance of the launch goes far beyond Anthropic itself. The real story is that AI companies are now aggressively targeting the huge middle ground between enterprise software and ordinary consumer tools.
For example, rather than simply selling AI only to large corporations with dedicated implementation teams, firms like Anthropic increasingly want AI embedded directly into the everyday software stacks used by smaller businesses.
This could eventually allow small firms to automate tasks that previously required multiple staff, external agencies, or expensive specialist software.
Also, it increases the importance of understanding exactly how business data is being processed, stored, connected, and potentially reused by AI providers.
What Does This Mean For Your Business?
For businesses, Anthropic’s announcement is another sign that AI tools are rapidly becoming more operational, connected, and workflow-driven rather than simply conversational.
The appeal is obvious. Smaller companies are constantly under pressure to manage administration, finance, marketing, customer service, and compliance with limited staff and budgets. AI systems capable of handling parts of those repetitive workflows could potentially save significant time, reduce operational costs, and lessen the need for additional administrative headcount or outsourced support.
However, the launch also highlights the need for businesses to examine AI governance carefully before connecting sensitive financial, customer, and operational systems into external AI platforms.
As the technology itself becomes increasingly accessible to smaller businesses, understanding the privacy, control, and data implications is now becoming just as important as understanding the AI tools themselves.
Security Stop-Press : Reports Of AI Billing Attacks On Google Cloud Users
The Register and security researchers at Truffle Security have reported concerns over the alleged abuse of exposed Google Cloud API keys.
The reports suggest some older public-facing API keys, originally used for services like Google Maps, may also have been capable of accessing Gemini AI and Veo video-generation services if those APIs had been enabled within the same Google Cloud project, potentially leading to large unexpected bills for some users.
Google said the issue reflects wider industry problems involving leaked credentials rather than a Google-specific security flaw and said it has introduced stricter API restrictions to reduce the risk.
Businesses should treat API keys like passwords by restricting permissions, avoiding exposed reusable keys, enabling MFA, rotating credentials regularly, and closely monitoring billing alerts and quota changes.