AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters are placed on computer motherboard in this illustration taken, June 23, 2023.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOTTAWA, Nov 27 (Reuters) - The potential threat posed by the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) means safeguards need to be built in to systems from the start rather than tacked on later, a top U.S. official said on Monday.
"We've normalized a world where technology products come off the line full of vulnerabilities and then consumers are expected to patch those vulnerabilities.
We can't live in that world with AI," said Jen Easterly, director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
"We have to look at security throughout the lifecycle of that AI capability," Khoury said.
Persons:
Dado Ruvic, Jen, Sami Khoury, Khoury, David Ljunggren, Matthew Lewis
Organizations:
REUTERS, Rights OTTAWA, U.S, Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Security Agency, Canada's, Cyber Security, Thomson
Locations:
Ottawa, United States, British