ITU
Cybersecurity failure could be among the greatest challenges confronting the world in the next decade, according to the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2021. As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes increasingly embedded worldwide, fresh questions arise about how to safeguard countries and systems against attacks.
To deal with the vulnerabilities of AI, engineers and developers need to evaluate existing security methods, develop new tools and strategies, and formulate technical guidelines and standards, said Arndt Von Twickel, Technical Officer at Germany’s Federal Office for Information Security (BSI), at a recent AI for Good webinar.
New vulnerabilities
So-called “connectionist AI” systems support safety-critical applications like autonomous driving, which is set to be allowed on United Kingdom roads this year. Despite reaching “superhuman” performance levels in complex tasks like manoeuvring a vehicle, AI systems can still make critical mistakes based
As AI becomes increasingly embedded worldwide, fresh questions are emerging about how to safeguard machine learning systems - and the data that trains them - against malicious attacks.
SAP customers who don’t apply the company’s security patches are at risk of hackers gaining full control of unsecured SAP applications and stealing sensitive information, according to alerts issued by the software company and the federal governments of the US and Germany.
The alert issued by Germany-based SAP and Boston-based cybersecurity company Onapsis on Tuesday urges SAP software users to apply security patches, review security configurations of their SAP applications, investigate at-risk environments and perform a compromise assessment.
SAP issued the alert about what it called “active threats” because “many” organizations have still not applied relevant mitigation despite the fact that SAP patches for the vulnerabilities have been available for months, and on some occasions years.
SAP Warns About Active Threats To Applications, Urges Patches crn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from crn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
To improve the performance of our website, show the most relevant news products and targeted advertising, we collect technical impersonal information about you, including through the tools of our partners. You can find a detailed description of how we use your data in our Privacy Policy. For a detailed description of the technologies, please see the Cookie and Automatic Logging Policy.
By clicking on the Accept & Close button, you provide your explicit consent to the processing of your data to achieve the above goal.
You can withdraw your consent using the method specified in the Privacy Policy.
Accept & Close
Sputnik International