For security, AI is a land of contrasts

Today: Cybersecurity professionals hit the desert to discuss the pros and cons of AI's impact on security, OpenAI drops GPT-5, and the latest enterprise moves.

For security, AI is a land of contrasts
Photo by Grant Cai / Unsplash

Welcome to Runtime! Today: Cybersecurity professionals hit the desert to discuss the pros and cons of AI's impact, OpenAI drops GPT-5, and the latest enterprise moves.

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Summer camp for hackers

Each year in early August thousands of cybersecurity professionals — everyone from government officials to slick product salespeople to mischievous hackers — descend on Las Vegas for the Black Hat and DefCon conferences. Black Hat, which wraps up Thursday, is the more staid affair focused on the state of enterprise cybersecurity, and like everything else in enterprise tech these days conference speakers spent a lot of time this week discussing the impact of AI.

As Amazon CSO Steve Schmidt told Runtime in June, right now enterprise security teams and vendors who have employed generative AI as defenders have the upper hand on the elements that would like to use the same technology to launch attacks. This week Microsoft and Google showed off the results of their work using generative AI to fight malware and plug vulnerabilities.

On the offensive side, voice-phishing attacks (which we are apparently calling "vishing") were in focus this week after Google disclosed on Tuesday that customer data was stolen from one of its Salesforce databases earlier this year using that attack vector.

Cybersecurity has always been an arms race; attackers force defenders to step up their game, which then sets off a search for new attack surfaces. Generative AI is a new challenge, given that natural-language commands can be used to obtain sensitive data without having to learn how to exploit a buffer overflow.


Five on it

OpenAI dropped GPT-5 Thursday, almost two and a half years after the debut of GPT-4 and nearly a year after it was originally expected to arrive. "I think having something like GPT-5 would be pretty much unimaginable at any previous time in human history," said CEO Sam Altman, according to the BBC, and it's hard to argue that the Mayans would have been a little bewildered by the launch video.

GPT-5 simplifies the naming conventions across OpenAI's roster of models, and also features a "real-time router" that decides whether to use a "smart, efficient model" or a "deeper reasoning model" depending on the nature of the prompt. Benchmarks cited in its release blog post compare it favorably to basically every other model ever released, but that's what any benchmark cited in any launch release is going to show.

Early real-world reviews were positive: "It’s still an LLM — it’s not a dramatic departure from what we’ve had before — but it rarely screws up and generally feels competent or occasionally impressive at the kinds of things I like to use models for," said Simon Willison, a widely followed AI expert, after having access to the new model for several weeks. He also noted that OpenAI's pricing for the new model was "aggressively competitive," which should entice developers to give it a whirl.


Enterprise moves

Anand Subbaraman is the new CEO of Icertis, taking over for Samir Bodas (who will remain executive chairman) after serving as COO at the contract-management company for more than a year.

Richard Wong is the new CFO of Fastly, joining the edge computing company after similar roles at Benchling and Houzz.

Diana Kelley is the new CISO at Noma Security, following security leadership roles at Protect AI, Microsoft, and IBM.


The Runtime roundup

AWS will give U.S. government agencies an aggressive discount on cloud services over the next several years, one month after Oracle agreed to a similar deal.

The city council of Tucson, Arizona, voted unanimously Wednesday to block a new data-center project with links to AWS, underscoring how difficult building new data centers in the U.S. is about to get over the next few years.

"Microsoft is cautiously onboarding Grok 4 following Hitler concerns," according to The Verge, and folks, what a time it is to be alive.


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