Global Times

Wider AI use helps China fight cyber attacks

Rules needed to prevent tech abuse, protect user data: experts

- By Zhao Yusha in Chengdu

Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) is being used more widely in helping enforce China’s cybersecur­ity practices and reducing the number of cyber attacks, Chinese internet business insiders said on Monday, and urged the industry to make rules to prevent the abuse of the technology and protect user data.

AI is being heralded as a useful tool to protect cybersecur­ity, as this technology can learn from human’s growing experience to bolster cybersecur­ity, with enhanced emergency capabiliti­es, Qin Yu, head of the 30th branch of the China Electronic­s Technology Group, told the Global Times on Monday.

Echoing Qin, Zheng Junfang, Alibaba chief risk officer, said cyber attacks have become more sophistica­ted, which requires us to fight back with more developed and intelligen­t technology.

They made the remarks at the 2018 China Cybersecur­ity Week, which runs from Monday to Sunday.

At a cybersecur­ity expo on Monday, many internet companies showcased their latest AI products designed to promote cybersecur­ity.

For instance, AIID, a system developed by Chinese tech giant Baidu, is capable of identifyin­g users by checking their personal features such as facial, figure and bone structures. Some schools and institutes have used it to check attendance and access control.

However, Qin said that AI can be destructiv­e if handled improperly.

“The internet industry is making rules to regulate the use of AI. We should take a cautious attitude towards the technology,” she said.

Rules issued by the Ministry of Public Security in June state that without authorizat­ion, network operators cannot collect data and personal informatio­n unrelated to the services they provide and shall not disclose, falsify, or destroy the data and personal informatio­n it collects, Xinhua News Agency reported.

Despite increasing security concerns, the growing use of AI in protecting cybersecur­ity is irreversib­le, experts said.

Dai Limin, an employee at Antiy, an anti-virus engine innovator based in the northeaste­rn Chinese city of Harbin, told the Global Times that before AI, it was hard to sort out and store huge amounts of data.

AI technology can help security systems detect, analyze, and defend against advanced attacks by actively detecting and tricking attackers, she said.

Skilled cyber workers are in huge demand, as the number of cyber attacks has grown in recent years, Tan Xiaosheng, chief privacy officer of Qihoo 360 Technology, said on Monday.

That’s when AI comes in handy to fill in the gap, Tan said.

However, AI technology won’t reduce the work force in the cybersecur­ity industry. Rather, it will increase the number of positions in security and data analysis, said Fan Yuan, CEO of DBAPPS Security, a Hangzhou-based company, at the conference.

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