ATLANTIS: AI-driven Threat Localization, Analysis, and Triage Intelligence System
Authors: Taesoo Kim, HyungSeok Han, Soyeon Park, Dae R. Jeong, Dohyeok Kim, Dongkwan Kim, Eunsoo Kim, Jiho Kim, Joshua Wang, Kangsu Kim, Sangwoo Ji, Woosun Song, Hanqing Zhao, Andrew Chin, Gyejin Lee, Kevin Stevens, Mansour Alharthi, Yizhuo Zhai, Cen Zhang, Joonun Jang, Yeongjin Jang, Ammar Askar, Dongju Kim, Fabian Fleischer, Jeongin Cho, Junsik Kim, Kyungjoon Ko, Insu Yun, Sangdon Park, Dowoo Baik, Haein Lee, Hyeon Heo, Minjae Gwon, Minjae Lee, Minwoo Baek, Seunggi Min, Wonyoung Kim, Yonghwi Jin, Younggi Park, Yunjae Choi, Jinho Jung, Gwanhyun Lee, Junyoung Jang, Kyuheon Kim, Yeonghyeon Cha, Youngjoon Kim
Abstract: We present ATLANTIS, the cyber reasoning system developed by Team Atlanta that won 1st place in the Final Competition of DARPA's AI Cyber Challenge (AIxCC) at DEF CON 33 (August 2025). AIxCC (2023-2025) challenged teams to build autonomous cyber reasoning systems capable of discovering and patching vulnerabilities at the speed and scale of modern software. ATLANTIS integrates large language models (LLMs) with program analysis -- combining symbolic execution, directed fuzzing, and static analysis -- to address limitations in automated vulnerability discovery and program repair. Developed by researchers at Georgia Institute of Technology, Samsung Research, KAIST, and POSTECH, the system addresses core challenges: scaling across diverse codebases from C to Java, achieving high precision while maintaining broad coverage, and producing semantically correct patches that preserve intended behavior. We detail the design philosophy, architectural decisions, and implementation strategies behind ATLANTIS, share lessons learned from pushing the boundaries of automated security when program analysis meets modern AI, and release artifacts to support reproducibility and future research.
Explore the paper tree
Click on the tree nodes to be redirected to a given paper and access their summaries and virtual assistant
Look for similar papers (in beta version)
By clicking on the button above, our algorithm will scan all papers in our database to find the closest based on the contents of the full papers and not just on metadata. Please note that it only works for papers that we have generated summaries for and you can rerun it from time to time to get a more accurate result while our database grows.