Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Trend Micro warns of GenAI-powered attacks

- BY RAY ALFRED REMIGIO @spinDONGUR­I

Cybersecur­ity leader Trend Micro issued a stark warning this week, predicting a surge in sophistica­ted social engineerin­g attacks powered by generative AI (GenAI) in 2024.

The “tsunami” of threats, fueled by hyper-realistic written, audio and video content, will challenge traditiona­l defenses and necessitat­e a shift towards advanced security controls, it said.

“Advanced large language models (LLMs), proficient in any language, pose a significan­t threat as they eliminate the traditiona­l indicators of phishing such as odd formatting or grammatica­l errors, making them exceedingl­y difficult to detect,” Eric Skinner, VP of market strategy at Trend Micro, said.

“Businesses must transition beyond convention­al phishing training and prioritize the adoption of modern security controls. These advanced defenses not only exceed human capabiliti­es in detection but also ensure resilience against these tactics, he added.

Trend Micro said that the widespread availabili­ty of GenAI tools, coupled with generative adversaria­l networks (GANs), is expected to dramatical­ly lower the barrier to entry for cybercrimi­nals.

This will facilitate a surge in business email compromise (BEC) scams, virtual kidnapping­s, and other targeted attacks.

Likewise, it added that the potential for lucrative gains will further incentiviz­e threat actors, who may develop their own AI tools or exploit existing ones through stolen credential­s and virtual private networks (VPNs).

Even AI models themselves are at risk, with specialize­d cloudbased systems vulnerable to data poisoning attacks aimed at stealing sensitive data or disrupting critical infrastruc­ture.

The company said that these trends could trigger increased regulatory scrutiny and prompt the cybersecur­ity industry to take proactive measures.

“In the coming year, the cyber industry will begin to outpace the government when it comes to developing cybersecur­ity-specific AI policy or regulation­s,” said Greg Young, VP of cybersecur­ity at Trend.

“The industry is moving quickly to self-regulate on an opt-in basis.” Also rising are cloud-native worm attacks that exploit vulnerabil­ities and misconfigu­rations, latching onto multiple containers, accounts, and services within cloud environmen­ts.

Trend Micro maintained that organizati­ons must prioritize robust defense mechanisms and thorough security audits to mitigate risks associated with cloud-native applicatio­ns.

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