Nicholas Carlini, a research scientist at Anthropic, ran a simple bash script that looped over every file in the Linux kernel and asked Claude Code to look for security vulnerabilities. It found a heap buffer overflow sitting undetected for 23 years. His reaction: “I have never found one of these in my life before. This is very, very, very hard to do.”
The detail that caught my attention wasn’t the 23-year-old bug. It was this: Carlini now has hundreds of potential vulnerabilities he can’t report because human validation is the bottleneck. The agent is finding bugs faster than humans can verify them.
That bottleneck will sound familiar to anyone in editorial.
I’ve been told for years that statistical editors are among the hardest resources to source and retain in journal publishing. Most submissions never get dedicated statistical review. We’ve known this is a gap — we just haven’t had a scalable way to close it.
The workflow I keep coming back to: extract the statistical claims and data from a paper, then check the numbers. Does the reported p-value follow from the sample size and test described? Are the confidence intervals consistent with the means and standard deviations in the table? This doesn’t require superhuman statistical reasoning — it requires reading carefully and doing arithmetic. Scite has already normalized AI-scale citation analysis in publishing; statistical checking is harder, but it’s the same category of thing.1
The real design challenge isn’t building the checking agent — it’s building the triage layer around what it finds. Carlini has hundreds of crashes he can’t report because validating them takes human time. Point an agent at a submission queue and you’d have the same problem immediately, except the stakes are higher: these findings affect publications, and publications affect careers.
My guess is that someone with a higher tolerance for false positives — an advocacy group, a post-publication review platform — will point agents at journal archives before publishers have their own systems in place. Publishers actually care about getting the literature right; we should build this on our terms, not wait to react.
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Scite was acquired by Research Solutions in 2024. ↩