Building Resilience Against Zero-Day Threats
In the quest for digital independence, Europe faces a significant catalyst: the recent two-year renewal of the United States' Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Section 702.
While initially enacted to boost US national security, Section 702 grants American intelligence agencies extensive powers to access data from US-based firms without a warrant.
The rise in zero-day vulnerabilities has prompted a stark warning from international authorities.
The Five Eyes cyber agencies, including the UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), recently published a report identifying the most exploited vulnerabilities of 2023. Unsurprisingly, many were zero-days.
Critical National Infrastructure (CNI) has increasingly found itself in the crosshairs of cyberattacks as geopolitical tensions rise.
The UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) has issued repeated warnings for organisations to prepare for potential hostilities, underscoring the vulnerabilities faced by essential service providers.
As organizations across industries continue to explore generative AI use cases and bring the technology into workflows at every level, conversations about its inherent challenges are also growing.
Hallucination, in which a model returns a partial or total fabrication, is one such challenge which is likely to cut down some high-risk use cases at inception.
Three major trends are shaping the digital workplace this year: shadow AI, self-healing tech, and digital employee experience.?
Beyond Experimentation: Moving from Proof of Concept to Impact with AI in Marketing ?- Oriol Zertuche
This article provides advice for marketers and businesses on how to effectively leverage AI in their marketing strategies.
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