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AI Does Not Scare Me, But It Will Make The Problem Of Social Engineering Much Worse

I am not scared of AI. What I mean is that I do not think AI is going to kill humanity Terminator-style. I think AI is going to be responsible for more cybercrime and more realistic phishing messages, but it is already pretty bad. Social engineering, without AI, is already involved in 70% - 90% of successful cyber attacks.

3 tips from Snyk and Dynatrace's AI security experts

McKinsey is calling 2023 “generative AI’s breakout year.” In one of their recent surveys, a third of respondents reported their organizations use GenAI regularly in at least one business function. But as advancements in AI continue to reshape the tech landscape, many CCISOs are left grappling with this question: How does AI impact software development cycles and the overall security of business applications?

In AI we trust: AI governance best practices from legal and compliance leaders

According to Vanta’s State of Trust Report, 54% of businesses say that regulating AI would make them more comfortable investing in it. But with regulation still in flux, how can companies adopt AI safely and responsibly to minimize risk while accelerating innovation?

What Existing Security Threats Do AI and LLMs Amplify? What Can We Do About Them?

In my previous blog post, we saw how the growth of generative AI and Large Language Models has created a new set of challenges and threats to cybersecurity. However, it’s not just new issues that we need to be concerned about. The scope and capabilities of this technology and the volume of the components that it handles can exacerbate existing cybersecurity challenges. That’s because LLMs are deployed globally, and their impact is widespread.

AI & Cybersecurity: Navigating the Digital Future

As we keep a close eye on trends impacting businesses this year, it is impossible to ignore the impacts of Artificial Intelligence and its evolving relationship with technology. One of the key areas experiencing this transformational change is cybersecurity. The integration of AI with cybersecurity practices is imperative, and it also demands a shift in how businesses approach their defenses.

AI and digital twins: A roadmap for future-proofing cybersecurity

Keeping up with threats is an ongoing problem in the constantly changing field of cybersecurity. The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into cybersecurity is emerging as a vital roadmap for future-proofing cybersecurity, especially as organizations depend more and more on digital twins to mimic and optimize their physical counterparts.

The Road Ahead: What Awaits in the Era of AI-Powered Cyberthreats?

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly infiltrating the business world and our daily lives. While revolutionizing how – and how efficiently – work gets done, it also introduces a new set of cybersecurity challenges. In response to the evolving, AI-shaped threat landscape, I foresee organizations adopting robust countermeasures.

2024 IT Predictions: What to Make of AI, Cloud, and Cyber Resiliency

The future is notoriously hard to see coming. In the 1997 sci-fi classic Men in Black — bet you didn’t see that reference coming — a movie about extraterrestrials living amongst us and the secret organization that monitors them, the character Kay, played by the great Tommy Lee Jones, sums up this reality perfectly: While vistors from distant galaxies have yet to make first contact — or have they? — his point stands.