Cookies help us display personalized product recommendations and ensure you have great shopping experience.

By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
SmartData CollectiveSmartData Collective
  • Analytics
    AnalyticsShow More
    data analytics in ecommerce
    Analytics Technology Drives Conversions for Your eCommerce Site
    5 Min Read
    CRM Analytics
    CRM Analytics Helps Content Creators Develop an Edge in a Saturated Market
    5 Min Read
    data analytics and commerce media
    Leveraging Commerce Media & Data Analytics in Ecommerce
    8 Min Read
    big data in healthcare
    Leveraging Big Data and Analytics to Enhance Patient-Centered Care
    5 Min Read
    instagram visibility
    Data Analytics Plays a Key Role in Improving Instagram Visibility
    7 Min Read
  • Big Data
  • BI
  • Exclusive
  • IT
  • Marketing
  • Software
Search
© 2008-23 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: AI Is Vital To Cybersecurity During COVID-19: Don’t Underestimate Risks
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
SmartData CollectiveSmartData Collective
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • About
  • Help
  • Privacy
Follow US
© 2008-23 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
SmartData Collective > Business Intelligence > Artificial Intelligence > AI Is Vital To Cybersecurity During COVID-19: Don’t Underestimate Risks
Artificial IntelligenceITSecurity

AI Is Vital To Cybersecurity During COVID-19: Don’t Underestimate Risks

AI can help you keep your data and technology security during the COVID-19 pandemic. Here's how.

Ryan Kh
Last updated: June 25, 2020 5:19 pm
Ryan Kh
7 Min Read
data security / cybersecurity and AI
Shutterstock Licensed Photo - By Rawpixel.com | stock photo ID: 619615334
SHARE

Artificial intelligence is incredibly important in the new age of cyberwarfare. Hackers use AI frequently to conduct more vicious attacks. At the same time, cybersecurity experts are using AI to bolster their defenses.

Contents
AI is Crucial for Stopping Cybercrime During the PandemicChanges Are Happening Fast, and Hackers Are Taking NoticeTake Steps to Keep Employees SafeAI is Critical to Cybersecurity During the Pandemic

AI has become more important than ever during the COVID-19 crisis. Cybercrimes are up, so artificial intelligence and other big data tools are essential to thwart cybercriminals.

AI is Crucial for Stopping Cybercrime During the Pandemic

According to Computer Weekly, COVID-19 has spurred the largest cybersecurity attack ever, and hackers have businesses of all sizes in their sights. Your company may have made big changes to keep employees safe, but what have you done to protect them from cybersecurity threats related to the virus? You should be more resilient if you use the latest AI cybersecurity technology.

Employees working from home are doing so outside of the corporate office environment, where firewalls, AI-driven enterprise-level antivirus software, and physical security measures help add a layer of security simply not found in the telecommuting environment, where as many as 56 percent of employees are working from their own devices. With COVID-19-related malspam emails up 300 percent since the beginning of the pandemic, and distributed remote teams substantially increasing your organization’s attack surface, you need to take the risks seriously if your company hopes to get through this crisis digitally unscathed. This won’t be possible without the right AI tools at your disposal.

More Read

Largest HIPAA Breach Ever: Hackers Steal Data on 4.5 Million Community Health Systems Patients

5 Disruptive Technology Advancements Which Will Change Business as Usual
The State of Performance Management for Hybrid Clouds
It’s Time to Ditch Scarcity Thinking
3 Perks of an Office 365 Migration that You Didn’t Know About

Changes Are Happening Fast, and Hackers Are Taking Notice

The speed with which the COVID-19 crisis went from bad to worse as the virus spread around the world precipitated a rapid transition to remote work for most office workers, even those working for companies who had previously considered themselves thoroughly unable to accommodate telecommuting. Many companies rolled out new AI solutions with their business continuity plans that included transitioning employees to remote work in a matter of days, and many of the technologies that have enabled this sudden transition saw explosions in use, in some cases so much so that some collaborative technologies were strained. For example, early in the crisis, cloud services like Azure struggled to provide enough server bandwidth to cope with the sudden, drastic uptick in users relying on the services to get their jobs done.

The speedy transition to a remote workforce exposed gaps in some companies’ supply chains, forcing them to rapidly claw work back in-house or switch providers. These changes expose vulnerabilities that hackers can exploit, especially as they used more effective AI platforms. Even those companies that didn’t face sudden supply chain issues found themselves scrambling to equip employees with the equipment they’d need to work from home — and many companies chose to allow employees who own their own personal computers to use them for telecommuting, even though those machines are most likely nowhere near as secure as the ones now gathering dust in offices around the world.

Everyone is distracted and emotional, and while companies are focused on dealing with the public health crisis, hackers are taking advantage of that distraction to launch attacks against employees who, in their heightened state of anxiety, are less likely to think clearly about suspicious emails or weird links. Computer Weekly reports that companies have seen an uptick in attacks from keyloggers, password-stealing software, and, especially, phishing emails. Every employee who logs into company servers remotely via a VPN from an insecure machine is creating an access point that hackers can exploit. The increased reliance on cloud services has made more corporate data more accessible to criminals. And employees themselves can pose a direct risk, either because they’re seeking revenge for a poor company response to the pandemic, or because they’re simply not engaged or motivated enough to care about maintaining security protocols.

Take Steps to Keep Employees Safe

There’s no question that the move to remote work was and is necessary to keep employees physically safe and slow the spread of COVID-19. But it’s just as important to keep employees safe in the digital space, too, and protect the company from escalating risks. If possible, issue employees company laptops protected with comprehensive, enterprise-level endpoint security solutions with new AI and big data tools. Follow that up with regular — ideally, weekly — security check-ins from IT to ensure that employees’ security software is optimized, and that they’re being kept abreast of the latest developments in COVID-19-related security threats.

Many employees may need additional support to ensure home wireless networks are secure and that legacy gateways and routers are updated to more secure, newer models, which rely more on AI technology. And the use of collaborative tools like Zoom may need to be minimized, as some companies have experienced frightening intrusions on these platforms, including threat actors capturing and stealing meeting transcripts, recording meetings secretly, or even dropping into meetings unannounced — such that some organizations, like NASA, have gone so far as to ban the platform to prevent these types of breaches.

With most office workers doing their jobs remotely during the ongoing public health crisis, data security is more important than ever, and the risks aren’t expected to go away anytime soon. Do what you can to protect your employees and your company from cyber threats, because we’re all in this together.

AI is Critical to Cybersecurity During the Pandemic

The pandemic has created a number of challenges for businesses struggling with cybersecurity problems. Fortunately, new AI tools are helping stop hackers. Cybersecurity experts will be able to avoid security breaches if they deploy the right AI tools and adapt rapidly enough.

TAGGED:AIai securityartificial intelligencecovid-19cybersecuritydata securitydata technology
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn
Share
By Ryan Kh
Follow:
Ryan Kh is an experienced blogger, digital content & social marketer. Founder of Catalyst For Business and contributor to search giants like Yahoo Finance, MSN. He is passionate about covering topics like big data, business intelligence, startups & entrepreneurship. Email: ryankh14@icloud.com

Follow us on Facebook

Latest News

trusted data management
The Future of Trusted Data Management: Striking a Balance between AI and Human Collaboration
Artificial Intelligence Big Data Data Management
data analytics in ecommerce
Analytics Technology Drives Conversions for Your eCommerce Site
Analytics Exclusive
data grids in big data apps
Best Practices for Integrating Data Grids into Data-Intensive Apps
Big Data Exclusive
AI helps create discord server bots
AI-Driven Discord Bots Can Track Server Stats
Artificial Intelligence Exclusive

Stay Connected

1.2kFollowersLike
33.7kFollowersFollow
222FollowersPin

You Might also Like

Why Business Data Backup is More Important than Ever

3 Min Read
data backup guide
Data Management

Here Is How To Selectively Backup Your Data

7 Min Read
data security unveiled
Security

Data Security Unveiled: Protecting Your Information in a Connected World

8 Min Read
artificial intelligence tech venture abroad
Artificial Intelligence

Actionable Tips To Set Up an AI Tech Venture Abroad

6 Min Read

SmartData Collective is one of the largest & trusted community covering technical content about Big Data, BI, Cloud, Analytics, Artificial Intelligence, IoT & more.

ai chatbot
The Art of Conversation: Enhancing Chatbots with Advanced AI Prompts
Chatbots
ai is improving the safety of cars
From Bolts to Bots: How AI Is Fortifying the Automotive Industry
Artificial Intelligence

Quick Link

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
Follow US
© 2008-24 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Go to mobile version
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?