Artificial intelligence is already used for identity theft in a number of ways, from artificial intelligence-enhanced phishing to deepfakes.
At Delinea Inc., the focus is on securing customers’ identities through rigorous internal detection. Although AI-enhanced cyber attacks might be a fact of life, companies can take measures on their own turf to help minimize threats.
Delinea’s Jon Kuhn talks with theCUBE about Iris AI.
“Most of what customers are struggling with is compromised credentials,” said Jon Kuhn (pictured), senior vice president of products at Delinea. “Those are one of the key risks that people are dealing with in terms of exfiltration of data. This is the subject that we tackle at Delinea, [which] is to really look at how can we help our customers reduce their blast radius from identity threats.”
Kuhn spoke with theCUBE’s Jackie McGuire at the Black Hat USA event, during an exclusive broadcast on theCUBE, News Media’s livestreaming studio. They discussed Delinea’s AI-powered threat detection software and why companies can struggle to prevent unauthorized access. (* Disclosure below.)
Reducing the potential for identity theft
One of the biggest threats to cybersecurity is “shadow IT,” or when employees use AI or other risky technologies without the company’s knowledge. This phenomenon arose with the transition to using personal computers for work, the advent of generative AI tools and the need for remote work during the pandemic. Now, companies are hoping to prevent identity theft by managing access within their organizations through tools such as Delinea’s Iris AI, according to Kuhn.
“We have the technology now with Iris AI, which is able to understand the authorization pieces, what is happening throughout that session and be able to flag that for the administrator to take action in an automated way,” he said. “That may be destroying the connection, it may be stopping the access altogether.”
Iris AI addresses potential threats by analyzing whether a user is accessing a critical asset and the intention behind that user’s action. The first step for a company trying to prevent unauthorized access, according to Kuhn, is sorting out any lingering issues in-house.
“When you’re dealing with AI and the frustration that our customers have, the first problem is visibility,” Kuhn said. “They don’t really know what’s lurking in their environment, and that’s the first question that we get from customers.”
Here’s the complete video interview, part of News’s and theCUBE’s coverage of the Black Hat USA event:
(* Disclosure: Delinea Inc. sponsored this segment of theCUBE. Neither Delinea nor other sponsors have editorial control over content on theCUBE or News.)
Photo: News
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