Japan Leads Push For AI-Based Anti-Cyberattack Solutions (nikkei.com) 34
An anonymous reader writes: Japanese firms NTT Communications and SoftBank are working to develop new artificial intelligence (AI) platforms, offering cyber-attack protection services to their customers. Up until recently, AI-based security systems were only used for certain scenarios, in online fraud detection for example. The new offerings will be the first commercially-available platforms of their type for use in a wide range of applications.
damn, first i read 'cynertank' (Score:2)
No dinochrome brigade...for now.
Re: damn, first i read 'cybertank' (Score:2)
cybertank. Bleah. Touch screen at half past 5. Time to get up and walk dogs.
lenny has better things to do (or worse things to not do)
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Clarify... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Clarify... (Score:5, Funny)
In their case, when it detects a cyber attack, it signals the giant mecha robot station in LEO to launch powered cybernetic suits that enter the earths atmosphere and land on top of the attack command and control. These suits then rip the roofs off the houses/offices of the attackers and pulls their pasty, fat asses out of their chairs and slice them to pieces using energy blade weapons. Unless the attackers are female, at which point they are returned to the giant mecha robot station to be brainwashed and trained as cybernetic suit pilots with psychic powers and fucked up emotional issues of identity, purpose, and a weird love 2+n(angle).
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One of the aspects of AI/machine-learning is deep down it's only one algorithm. Just like a human mind/brain, it learns any skill-- the underlying brain structure/neurons is the same. It can do things like object recognition in images(already available in google my-photos), facial recognition, voice recognition, language translation etc.
So to call something as AI it must just take in huge amounts of data and figure out a structure/classification in the data all by itself. It's like you are given 100 pic
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is a Baysian spam filter an "AI-based anti-spam solution"?
If the probabilities are hard coded, then no. If it learns and updates itself, then yes, that is AI. AI is determined by behavior, not mechanism.
what exactly qualifies or disqualifies something for 'AI-based'
Programs that learn and adapt are AI.
'deep learning', and similar buzzwords?
"Deep learning" refers to neural nets that have more than one hidden layer and are thus "deep". They are usually based on RBMs [wikipedia.org]. "Deep learning" has a very specific meaning, and is not a "buzzword".
Employment Secured (Score:2)
This is great. I sadly missed out (was too young) for the whole Y2K money fest, but I saw the new BMWs and expensive vacations that many of my older computing peers undertook as a result of the exorbitant amounts of money they charged to review old source code. I also knew enough then to realise that about 95% of what 'experts' were saying on the TV was nothing more than fear mongering.
Anyway with this cyber-warfare stuff kicking in there should be no shortage of cushy contract work for decades to come. The
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Skynet ? (Score:5, Informative)
At least a step in that direction.
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Or codenamed "Project 2501"
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Useless AI based anti-cyberattack solutions .. (Score:3)
Why not solve this instead? (Score:2)
Instead of assuming that the programs you run can be trusted, flip the assumption, and a lot of "cyber security | cyber war" crap goes away. This can be fixed, folks.
What if the AI is subverted? (Score:2)
And no one notices? Relying on a machine to do all the work sounds a bit like leaving a dog to guard against other dogs. It might work or they might end up sniffing each others balls.
mark my words... (Score:2)
This will NOT end well.....
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It's all perfectly safe....
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