All hopes are pinned on 2025, when several very serious vendors are planning releases of new-generation products. They are systematically preparing the market: in the latest versions of their developments, the contribution of artificial intelligence to the tasks solved by the products will be significantly higher. Such marketing “warm-up” gives reason to believe that we will see improvements due to the use of AI in SIEM, DLP, and traffic analysis systems.
AI will help reduce the number of false positives and predict which of the detected anomalies may develop into real incidents or are already such. For example, the AI engine inside the SIEM system will distinguish a user from an intruder by the nature of the remote connection. The neural network will independently check the IP address, find information about whether this address belongs to one of the hacker groups, and independently protect itself from such a connection. All this will happen in the background, even if the IP address has not been blacklisted by the company's information security specialists.
At the same time, the contribution of AI to information security. From the point of view of blue teams, or teams to repel hacker attacks, AI will definitely not become a magic pill that will do almost everything for an information security specialist. But it will be able to check the configuration, add some data to black and white lists, analyze events that people do not always have time to do. The overall level of security will increase, since there will be fewer errors due to the human factor. But this growth will be moderate. I do not expect a fundamental strengthening of security with the help of AI.
What cyber risks does business face most often in bahamas mobile database recently? Are there any effective ways to reliably protect a company's infrastructure from these threats?
The spectrum of threats has not changed much. The risks remain diverse, each of them is specific to a particular organization. Another trend is interesting: cyberattacks against domestic organizations have completely switched to commercial tracks. Absolutely all attackers who succeed in hacking demand money - either for decryption, or for returning access to the site, or for the databases not to be published. And if they fail to reach an agreement, they "change their shoes": "Look! We hacked because we can!" No illusions: attacks have become a real business. The threshold for entry into this business has decreased precisely thanks to AI and a huge number of ready-made solutions for cyberattacks. Hackers are not getting smarter, but they are bothering more and more organizations.
It is important not to overestimate
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