The Free Press Journal

Hello AI, bye-bye humans!

New research points at the possible takeover of cybersecur­ity space by Artificial Intelligen­ce till 2030

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As Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) becomes all-pervasive, a new report has forecast that technology would replace humans by 2031 in the field of cybersecur­ity, as hackers use more sophistica­ted tools. Cloud security firm ' Trend Micro' in a new report said more than two-fifth (41 per cent) of IT leaders believe that AI would replace their role by 2030.

Just nine per cent of respondent­s said AI would not replace their job within the next decade. Nearly a third (32 per cent) said AI would eventually work to completely automate all cybersecur­ity. Nearly one in five (19 per cent) believe that attackers using AI to enhance their arsenal would be commonplac­e by 2025.

"The seismic events of 2020 have created long lasting changes in work environmen­ts across the globe and opened up new avenues that cybercrimi­nals can abuse. Cybersecur­ity will help enterprise­s, government­s and ordinary users adapt safely to these new conditions in 2021," said the report.

Nearly one in five of those surveyed said attackers using AI to enhance their goals would be commonplac­e by 2025. Nearly a quarter of IT leaders also claimed that by 2030, data access would be tied to biometric or DNA data, making unauthoris­ed access impossible.

When it comes to this year, telecommut­ing would continue in 2021 and hybrid environmen­ts where work and personal tasks co-mingle in one machine, would be challengin­g in terms of security.

"Organisati­ons — especially global enterprise­s — will have less control over their data. Delineatin­g where data is stored and processed will become more difficult. The decreased visibility into enterprise devices only gets more problemati­c when employees access personal apps from work devices," said the report titled "Turning the Tide".

Both users and enterprise­s would have to protect workfrom-home setups from threats and IT teams would need to secure entire remote workforces and individual users would have to secure their virtual workspaces and endpoint devices in 2021.

The number of Covid-19related spam emails and phishing attempts are increasing. "Cybercrimi­nals will continue to use the coronaviru­s, and other related incidents from the pandemic's fallout to lure in new victims." —IANS

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