Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AI Government Security

Pentagon Launches AI Competition To Solicit Help Securing Computer Systems (nbcnews.com) 7

DARPA, the Pentagon agency that funds moonshot technology innovations, is hosting a two-year competition for artificial intelligence experts to create new ways to bolster the world's cybersecurity. From a report: The competition launches Wednesday at the cybersecurity conference Black Hat in Las Vegas. It asks participants to create tools that can be used by anyone to help identify and fix holes in software to keep hackers from exploiting them. It will dole out a total of $18.5 million to winners in different categories and will formally conclude at the Def Con hacker conference in Las Vegas in August 2025.

In a call to reporters Tuesday previewing the competition, Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said it was "a clarion call for all kinds of creative people and organizations to bolster the security of critical software that American families and businesses and all of our society relies on." U.S. organizations have been battered by hackers in recent years. During the Biden administration alone, federal agencies have been repeatedly breached by hackers allegedly working for Chinese and Russian intelligence services, which often find creative ways to break into common software programs and then use that access to spy on government activity around the world.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Pentagon Launches AI Competition To Solicit Help Securing Computer Systems

Comments Filter:
  • "......I suggest the number 2 and will you be having dessert today?"
  • Spend some time playing run 3 [runaway3d.io]. I'm interested in finding out more because I have strong views about it. Would you please provide more details to your blog post? We will all actually gain from it.
  • A computer-generated voice saying: "Want. To. Play. A. Game?"

"If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong." -- Norm Schryer

Working...