Artificial Intelligence (AI) Cybersecurity: It’s All About Behavior!

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Cybersecurity: It’s All About Behavior!

The latest leading-edge data intelligence topics referred to as Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML) and, Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) are currently experiencing significant venture and corporate capital investments. Some of the advantages of ingesting large quantities of data and creating a corpus of knowledge to draw insights are very interesting for complex subjects such as cybersecurity, healthcare and financial services. The use cases of AI in healthcare such as DNA/genome research are truly captivating to read. The parallels to cybersecurity research and respective knowledge base for predicting and analyzing data will be step-functions of change needed to understand the data collection and interpretation of threats. The application of any form of AI includes a “people factor,” as directly linked to both ends of a “cyber activity.” A “cyber event” is started by a person and the resolution is implemented and managed by the same.

The behavior part of cybersecurity also involves people, but machine behavior plays a significant role in cyber events. For example, if we can measure a baseline of machine behavior that is “known good,” then we can react—potentially in real-time—to machine changes in behavior. There are many parameters to consider and behaviors that may be considered non-issues to filter; however, having a system of behavioral analytics under the category of AI/ML/ANN brings data-driven decision making.

A few scenarios to outline this include known devices on the network or IoT devices changing their state. In the first case of known devices, this has been a topic we have been discussing in the security space for a very long time. Products and technologies have been built for attestation, key management and device authentication—to capture a few categories. As we move up a level from the cryptography space to understanding the metadata a device produces, we can measure changes, arrival, departure and state. By observing anything with an IP address in relationship to the context of its metadata, we can filter “good” and “bad” activities, behaviors and changes. If a known device comes on the network at 8 am on Monday normally, but an unknown device comes on the network at 3:00 am, we can create an action to change that behavior and thus become proactive in our cyber preparedness. Alternately, if a known device that was once considered “good” starts talking to a “bad” actor site or shows a change in its metadata that is considered out of policy/standard, then actions can be taken to quarantine or remediate accordingly.

In the second example of IoT devices changing their state, we have seen this with IP cameras, and medical devices. The potential case of industrial systems being taken over by the “zombie robot apocalypse” is not as far removed from reality as one might think. Hackers can exploit flaws and create subtle changes to industrial control systems, which could be dramatic in scale or event. I am not suggesting that the machines will take over the world, but I am suggesting close monitoring of IoT devices for behavioral changes that could indicate the presence or possibility of a wider scale issue.

As an industry, we can start to move from a reactive to a proactive state in the category of cyber preparedness. A real-time approach to monitoring device behaviors could reduce cyber event time to discovery from the current industry average of 256 days. The cost of discovery time is escalating every year. Our small and-medium businesses cannot afford the costs of remediation and losses that accompany a cyber event. The statistics of survival for SMBs in a cyber event estimate that roughly 60 percent or 6 out 10 will not be in business in six months.

The current state of cybersecurity necessitates the establishment of continuous monitoring practices—to monitor both known devices on networks and IoT devices changing their state. The innovations of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and artificial neural networks (ANN) are paving the way for a proactive cyber approach.