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.
It’s no longer theoretical; phishing attacks and email scams are leveraging AI-generated content based on testing with anti-AI content solutions. I’ve been telling you since the advent of ChatGPT’s public availability that we’d see AI’s misuse to craft compelling and business-level email content.
How can developers use AI securely in their tooling and processes, software, and in general? Is AI a friend or foe? Read on to find out.
Artificial intelligence (AI) has seamlessly woven itself into the fabric of our digital landscape, revolutionizing industries from healthcare to finance. As AI applications proliferate, the shadow of privacy concerns looms large. The convergence of AI and privacy gives rise to a complex interplay where innovative technologies and individual privacy rights collide.