Generative AI is poised to revolutionize vulnerability discovery in critical infrastructure, but will it actually fix the problem, or just shift the burden?
The recent AI Cybersecurity Challenge (AIxCC), a two-year competition sponsored by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), crowned winners whose AI systems autonomously discovered and patched zero-day flaws in real-world code.
Now, with models potentially going open-source, the implications for defenders, attackers and policymakers are seismic.
In this episode, we sat down with Taesoo Kim, the leader of Team Atlanta, the AIxCC winning team, and Andrew Carney, program manager for the AIxCC at DARPA and ARPA-H.
In the interview (13.56), they discuss why the commercialization of GenAI-powered vulnerability scanning tools could be just around the corner and how "self-healing infrastructure" might soon become a reality.
All content for Infosecurity Magazine Podcast is the property of Infosecurity Magazine and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Generative AI is poised to revolutionize vulnerability discovery in critical infrastructure, but will it actually fix the problem, or just shift the burden?
The recent AI Cybersecurity Challenge (AIxCC), a two-year competition sponsored by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), crowned winners whose AI systems autonomously discovered and patched zero-day flaws in real-world code.
Now, with models potentially going open-source, the implications for defenders, attackers and policymakers are seismic.
In this episode, we sat down with Taesoo Kim, the leader of Team Atlanta, the AIxCC winning team, and Andrew Carney, program manager for the AIxCC at DARPA and ARPA-H.
In the interview (13.56), they discuss why the commercialization of GenAI-powered vulnerability scanning tools could be just around the corner and how "self-healing infrastructure" might soon become a reality.
Despite a general slowdown of ransomware attacks in in 2022 we are now experiencing a resurgence of ransomware activities.
In this episode, the Infosecurity Magazine team discuss some of the research recently published by threat analysts in the ransomware space and what it is demonstrating about how threat actors are evolving their approaches in 2023.
This includes interviews with two cybersecurity experts who have uncovered critical new insights into the evolution of ransomware.
Guests include:
Jacqueline Burns Koven, Head of Cyber Threat Intelligence at Chainalysis, explains why ransomware is on course for one of its biggest years to date (07.15)
Dr Karen Nershi, Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford Internet Observatory, discusses increasing political motivations for this threat vector (22.45)
Tune in now to understand the latest ransomware trends and tactics.
Infosecurity Magazine Podcast
Generative AI is poised to revolutionize vulnerability discovery in critical infrastructure, but will it actually fix the problem, or just shift the burden?
The recent AI Cybersecurity Challenge (AIxCC), a two-year competition sponsored by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), crowned winners whose AI systems autonomously discovered and patched zero-day flaws in real-world code.
Now, with models potentially going open-source, the implications for defenders, attackers and policymakers are seismic.
In this episode, we sat down with Taesoo Kim, the leader of Team Atlanta, the AIxCC winning team, and Andrew Carney, program manager for the AIxCC at DARPA and ARPA-H.
In the interview (13.56), they discuss why the commercialization of GenAI-powered vulnerability scanning tools could be just around the corner and how "self-healing infrastructure" might soon become a reality.