A new report from cybersecurity firm HiddenLayer finds that Google Gemini is vulnerable to prompt injection attacks. The researchers characterize it as being open to "profound misuse."
The security industry was hit by an increasing number of AI-powered cyberattacks in 2023, and that is not going to slow down in 2024. As these attacks evolve as AI infiltrates every aspect of business, here’s what security leaders should resolve to do this year amid AI threats.
The EU’s recent negotiated agreement over the A.I. Act is one of the world’s first comprehensive attempts to govern the use of AI. Enforcement won’t kick in until 2025, but IT leaders are already trying to stay ahead lest they risk falling behind.
The increasing prevalence of AI is creating a more dangerous phishing environment for companies of all sizes. A single hacker can now generate as much as 100 times more malicious content than they could previously.
NIST has released a guideline paper meant to give AI developers a bird's-eye view of potential cyber threats that may present during the development and early deployment of their models.
The future of data is not about how much we collect, but how ethically it is used and how we can realistically safeguard it so that we get the best out of AI without violating data privacy tenets.
New AI security guidelines offers a general overview of expected risks and threats from the initial design process, through the development life cycle and deployment, and all the way through ongoing operation and maintenance after deployment.
While cybersecurity practitioners have uncovered many ways that the predictive technology can benefit security teams, threat actors have also been swift to adopt generative AI as the newest tool in their arsenals for launching sophisticated attacks.
CISA has released a roadmap establishing four overarching broad goals, with five more specific lines of effort that appear to indicate concrete immediate priorities. Defensive AI cybersecurity measures and plans for critical infrastructure adoption are repeating themes.
Enterprise use of AI may expand the attack surface for cybercriminals, but leveraging AI technologies can also allow security teams to get ahead in defending against and preventing adversarial AI and AI-powered cyber threats.