• Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA
  • Disclaimer
Sunday, March 31, 2024
CryptoBangs.com
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Live Crypto Prices
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Ripple
    • Altcoin
    • NFT News
  • DeFi
  • Blockchain
  • Regulation
  • Shop
  • Blog
  • Calculator
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Live Crypto Prices
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Ripple
    • Altcoin
    • NFT News
  • DeFi
  • Blockchain
  • Regulation
  • Shop
  • Blog
  • Calculator
No Result
View All Result
CryptoBangs.com
No Result
View All Result

Whatever happened to security? Privacy?

March 31, 2024
in Regulation
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Whatever happened to security? Privacy?
ShareShareShareShareShare

The following is a guest post from John deVadoss, Governing Board of the Global Blockchain Business Council in Geneva and co-founder of the InterWork Alliance in Washington, DC.

Last week, I had the opportunity in Washington, DC to present and discuss the implications of AI relating to Security with some members of Congress and their staff.

Generative AI today reminds me of the Internet in the late 80s – fundamental research, latent potential, and academic usage, but it is not yet ready for the public. This time, unfettered vendor ambition, fueled by minor-league venture capital and galvanized by Twitter echo chambers, is fast-tracking AI’s Brave New World.

The so-called “public” foundation models are tainted and inappropriate for consumer and commercial use; privacy abstractions, where they exist, leak like a sieve; security constructs are very much a work in progress, as the attack surface area and the threat vectors are still being understood; and the illusory guardrails, the less that is said about them, the better.

So, how did we end up here? And whatever happened to Security? Privacy?

“Compromised” Foundation Models

The so-called “open” models are anything but open. Different vendors tout their degrees of openness by opening up access to the model weights, or the documentation, or the tests. Still, none of the major vendors provide anything close to the training data sets or their manifests or lineage to be able to replicate and reproduce their models.

This opacity with respect to the training data sets means that if you wish to use one or more of these models, then you, as a consumer or as an organization, do not have any ability to verify or validate the extent of the data pollution with respect to IP, copyrights, etc. as well as potentially illegal content.

Critically, without the manifest of the training data sets, there is no way to verify or validate the non-existent malicious content. Nefarious actors, including state-sponsored actors, plant trojan horse content across the web that the models ingest during their training, leading to unpredictable and potentially malicious side effects at inference time.

Remember, once a model is compromised, there is no way for it to unlearn, the only option is to destroy it.

“Porous” Security

Generative AI models are the ultimate security honeypots as “all” data has been ingested into one container. New classes and categories of attack vectors arise in the era of AI; the industry is yet to come to terms with the implications both with respect to securing these models from cyber threats and, with respect to how these models are used as tools by cyberthreat actors.

Malicious prompt injection techniques may be used to poison the index; data poisoning may be used to corrupt the weights; embedding attacks, including inversion techniques, may be used to pull rich data out of the embeddings; membership inference may be used to determine whether certain data was in the training set, etc., and this is just the tip of the iceberg.

Threat actors may gain access to confidential data via model inversion and programmatic query; they may corrupt or otherwise influence the model’s latent behavior; and, as mentioned earlier, the out-of-control ingestion of data at large leads to the threat of embedded state-sponsored cyber activity via trojan horses and more.

“Leaky” Privacy

AI models are helpful because of the data sets that they are trained on; indiscriminate ingestion of data at scale creates unprecedented privacy risks for the individual and for the public at large. In the era of AI, privacy has become a societal concern; regulations that primarily address individual data rights are inadequate.

Beyond static data, it is imperative that dynamic conversational prompts be treated as IP to be protected and safeguarded. If you are a consumer, engaged in co-creating an artifact with a model, you want your prompts that direct this creative activity not to be used to train the model or otherwise shared with other consumers of the model.

If you are an employee working with a model to deliver business outcomes, your employer expects your prompts to be confidential; further, the prompts and the responses need a secure audit trail in the event of liability issues that surfaced by either party. This is primarily due to the stochastic nature of these models and the variability in their responses over time.

What happens next?

We are dealing with a different kind of technology, unlike any we have seen before in the history of computing, a technology that exhibits emergent, latent behavior at scale; yesterday’s approaches for security, privacy, and confidentiality do not work anymore.

The industry leaders are throwing caution to the winds, leaving regulators and policymakers with no alternative but to step in.

Credit: Source link

Related articles

Court rules Custodia Bank not entitled to Federal Reserve master account

Court rules Custodia Bank not entitled to Federal Reserve master account

March 29, 2024
CFTC’s Caroline Pham says KuCoin charges may infringe on SEC authority

CFTC’s Caroline Pham says KuCoin charges may infringe on SEC authority

March 29, 2024
ShareTweetSendPinShare
Previous Post

DeFi Game-Changer or Overhyped Speculation?

Next Post

Hirst, Snoop, Beeple to Shine on Netflix Documentary ‘NFT:WTF?’

Related Posts

Court rules Custodia Bank not entitled to Federal Reserve master account

Court rules Custodia Bank not entitled to Federal Reserve master account

March 29, 2024

A Wyoming court has ruled against Caitlin Long’s Custodia Bank by determining that the lender is not entitled to a...

CFTC’s Caroline Pham says KuCoin charges may infringe on SEC authority

CFTC’s Caroline Pham says KuCoin charges may infringe on SEC authority

March 29, 2024

CFTC Commissioner Caroline Pham said on March 29 that her agency’s charges against KuCoin may infringe on the duties of...

Binance-backed HKVAEX shuts down, gives users 30 days to withdraw amid Hong Kong regulatory tightening

Binance-backed HKVAEX shuts down, gives users 30 days to withdraw amid Hong Kong regulatory tightening

March 29, 2024

What is CryptoSlate Alpha?A web3 membership designed to empower you with cutting-edge insights and knowledge, powered by Access Protocol. Learn...

US federal agencies ordered to name AI officers, meet other requirements

US federal agencies ordered to name AI officers, meet other requirements

March 28, 2024

The White House ordered all US federal agencies to appoint chief AI officers on March 28. Vice President Kamala Harris...

US sanctions Palestinian media group Gaza Now, including its crypto wallets

US sanctions Palestinian media group Gaza Now, including its crypto wallets

March 28, 2024

What is CryptoSlate Alpha?A web3 membership designed to empower you with cutting-edge insights and knowledge, powered by Access Protocol. Learn...

Load More
Next Post
Hirst, Snoop, Beeple to Shine on Netflix Documentary ‘NFT:WTF?’

Hirst, Snoop, Beeple to Shine on Netflix Documentary 'NFT:WTF?'

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

SEC Brands Terraform Labs a “House of Cards” as Civil Trial Commences

SEC Brands Terraform Labs a “House of Cards” as Civil Trial Commences

March 26, 2024
Canary network testing proposed after AMM launch issues on Ripple’s XRP Ledger

Canary network testing proposed after AMM launch issues on Ripple’s XRP Ledger

March 25, 2024
Shiba Inu ‘Massively Outperformed My Expectations’: Vitalik Buterin

Shiba Inu ‘Massively Outperformed My Expectations’: Vitalik Buterin

March 27, 2024
AnimeChain: Azuki’s New Frontier with Arbitrum and Weeb3

AnimeChain: Azuki’s New Frontier with Arbitrum and Weeb3

March 28, 2024
Ripple Shares 2 Major Technical Advances For The XRP Ledger

Ripple Shares 2 Major Technical Advances For The XRP Ledger

March 29, 2024
CryptoBangs.com

CryptoBangs.com is an online news portal that aims to share the latest crypto news, bitcoin, altcoin, blockchain, nft news and much more stuff like that.

What’s New Here!

  • Hirst, Snoop, Beeple to Shine on Netflix Documentary ‘NFT:WTF?’
  • Whatever happened to security? Privacy?
  • DeFi Game-Changer or Overhyped Speculation?
  • Worldcoin Earns Approval From Ethereum Founder For Privacy Initiatives

Newsletter

Don't miss a beat and stay up to date with our Newsletter!
Loading

  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA
  • Disclaimer

© 2023 - CryptoBangs.com - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Live Crypto Prices
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Ripple
    • Altcoin
    • NFT News
  • DeFi
  • Blockchain
  • Regulation
  • Shop
  • Blog
  • Calculator

© 2018 JNews by Jegtheme.

You have not selected any currencies to display
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com