Thank you Patrick, there is a lot of potential good reading here. Realistically then there is an equal or greater amount of A.I. Newsletters on beehiiv, I try to follow them too. If A.I. is your jam, we really got you covered.
Most A.I. writers would never mention their "competitors", but that's not how I feel.
Hi, thanks for the reply to the reply :) I work in cybersecurity and keen to soak up as much as I can that is related to the impact it already has in my space and what's coming with its current tipping point trajectory, so I would be very interested in hearing your thoughts on best sources that cover that.
Having said that, it's also just a fascinating subject, from so many angles. I've bought a few books on the topic and right now the two I'm most interested in are The Battle for Your Brain, and Nina Schick's book on Deep Fakes
Thank you. This is valuable insights and feedback. I do think there is a gap in cyber security coverage from the perspective of AI. At a certain point I was trying to write an article on the topic and gave up.
I guess I wonder for industries where there is more demand than talent available in the labor pool if automation and AI because becoming more important in cyber security is inevitable.
I feel almost sure there is that more demand than talent situation right now. I guess that's another aspect of my interest in the topic. I find it genuinely fascinating, but from a self interest perspective, I think time spent learning what I can in this area will prove useful.
Then there is this added dimension of ChatGPT creating more cybersecurity risks like malware, no-code hacking and more sophisticated levels of phishing. Even from the point of view of black-hat offensive applications, Generative A.I. is creating even more "demand" for A.I. to be the solution in cybersecurity in the future. Microsoft understands this well, it's cybersecurity services is becoming a major pillar of their revenue.
So can you create a problem and then be the solution for that problem? The best example is technological loneliness with apps and then A.I. "companions", in the 2030s it's Her (2013) all day along.
Very cool, thanks for sharing. I subscribe to a couple of those, going to read through the whole post soon
Thank you Patrick, there is a lot of potential good reading here. Realistically then there is an equal or greater amount of A.I. Newsletters on beehiiv, I try to follow them too. If A.I. is your jam, we really got you covered.
Most A.I. writers would never mention their "competitors", but that's not how I feel.
Hi, thanks for the reply to the reply :) I work in cybersecurity and keen to soak up as much as I can that is related to the impact it already has in my space and what's coming with its current tipping point trajectory, so I would be very interested in hearing your thoughts on best sources that cover that.
Having said that, it's also just a fascinating subject, from so many angles. I've bought a few books on the topic and right now the two I'm most interested in are The Battle for Your Brain, and Nina Schick's book on Deep Fakes
Thank you. This is valuable insights and feedback. I do think there is a gap in cyber security coverage from the perspective of AI. At a certain point I was trying to write an article on the topic and gave up.
I guess I wonder for industries where there is more demand than talent available in the labor pool if automation and AI because becoming more important in cyber security is inevitable.
I feel almost sure there is that more demand than talent situation right now. I guess that's another aspect of my interest in the topic. I find it genuinely fascinating, but from a self interest perspective, I think time spent learning what I can in this area will prove useful.
Then there is this added dimension of ChatGPT creating more cybersecurity risks like malware, no-code hacking and more sophisticated levels of phishing. Even from the point of view of black-hat offensive applications, Generative A.I. is creating even more "demand" for A.I. to be the solution in cybersecurity in the future. Microsoft understands this well, it's cybersecurity services is becoming a major pillar of their revenue.
So can you create a problem and then be the solution for that problem? The best example is technological loneliness with apps and then A.I. "companions", in the 2030s it's Her (2013) all day along.
Damn - so well said