In cyber-physical systems, a breach does not stay digital. It disrupts operations. Production stops, equipment can be damaged and, in some cases, safety is compromised.
A group of security leaders, technologists and risk specialists gathered at a recent dinner sponsored by Check Point to discuss a shared challenge: how to govern artificial intelligence when its adoption is no longer optional, orderly, or in some cases even fully understood.
AI agents are reshaping the threat landscape as quickly as organisations adopt them. That was the challenge highlighted at a TEISS breakfast briefing at The Goring Hotel in London, hosted by Menlo Security.
When enterprise AI pilots succeed, they can quietly become a risk to security and safety, demanding governance that evolves from experimentation to ongoing operational control
MetaX Integrated Circuits jumped 700% in its Shanghai market debut as the Chinese AI chipmaker tapped into strong momentum triggered by Beijing’s push to reduce reliance on chips from U.S. firms Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices.
Executives are under pressure to roll out AI, but without proper governance, secure systems, and cultural safeguards, the rush to deploy risks doing more harm than good. IT teams can deploy tools to safeguard networks and lock down laptops, but human-centred attacks and behavioural risks are a trickier problem. With the rise of AI tools, said James Moore, CEO of behavioural security company CultureAI, the human-layer of security is becoming harder to manage than ever.
A new report has highlighted a worrying trend where Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools are being used to create massive, automated cyber crime infrastructures.
As artificial intelligence (AI) reshapes the cyber security landscape, organisations face a dual challenge: harnessing AI’s defensive capabilities while guarding against increasingly sophisticated AI-powered attacks, according to experts at a recent Business Reporter briefing.
With more environments to secure and a flood of data to analyse, designing security operations has never been more challenging for organisations. However, as attendees heard at a recent breakfast briefing, getting the right architecture in place can help to lighten the load.