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Cyber-Security: Predictions for 2019

One in three people has seen their personal data “compromised” during this year that has just ended, according to the “2018 Consumer Cybersecurity Study” conducted by “First Data (NYSE:FDC).

It’s not a joke, it’s reality. A situation that reaches levels of being the usual if we talk about the range of ages from 24 to 34 years, the “millennials”.

This capture of our personal data is referred to in slang as “data breaches”. Spectacular cases are known. From the already famous dating website (Adult-Friend-Finder) which exposed more than 400 million accounts back in 2016, to the Marriott hotels in 2018 which has exposed more than 500 million accounts. Not even NASA, which admitted to having suffered last October data theft of its employees (and ex-employees) including something as sensitive for U.S. residents as their social security number.

Before sharing my predictions about cyber-security 2019, I would like to emphasize the element that I consider most influential: Artificial Intelligence and some of its main impacts and consequences.

Advances in technology related to Artificial Intelligence are opening up immense opportunities that translate into new services, scientific advances, improvements in healthcare and, of course, business. However, this new era of data sharing has its double edge in data protection. The industry consensus is that neither cybersecurity nor regulation will by themselves be sufficient to protect us. Data has to be protected by the same technology that generates it, not just by regulation or cyber-security. In plain English, data has to incorporate factory cyber-security, not to go unarmed waiting for external elements of cyber-security to protect you or regulation to discourage bad practices.

Artificial Intelligence will permeate all aspects of our “cyber” life. For example, there will be more and more instruments that will behave like “quasi” humans. We see them in instruments like Alexa (Amazon), Google assistant (Google/Alphabet), or Siri (Apple). There are also those that we do not see, such as telephone assistants who we think are people, but they are not. They are robots with artificial intelligence, “chatbots” in the jargon, which are indistinguishable, on the part of the person on the other side, from authentic people.

These interesting services, and therefore susceptible of being used by hundreds of millions of people, are like honey attracting the bad guys. They will increasingly use these tools to deceive us, creating malicious chatbots that will attempt social engineering by clicking on links, downloading files or sharing private information. And beware, I’m not just talking about deceptions made by false people on social sites like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or similar. I’m talking about phone or voice fraud (simulating or “hacking” instruments like Alexa or similar). Let’s not forget that even Smart-tv’s or automobiles have voice recognition capabilities and therefore the ability to listen to what we say.

Having said that, here are my predictions about cyber-security for 2019:

We are presented with a 2019 full of uncertainties and possibilities. Many of them, derived from the impact of Artificial Intelligence, especially Deep Learning, in all spheres of our relationship with data. The repercussions will be massive, and I foresee a strong impact on the change of society. We will see how consumers will begin to become aware of the value of their data and claim its control and monetization. We will see a greater importance of regulation and its impact on data protection. We will see a greater sophistication in the tools and techniques of cyber-security, both for defense and for attack. However, the biggest change I anticipate for 2019 is the incorporation of protection into the factory’s own intrinsic design. In other words, taking the automobile as an example, it is not that we protect access to the brakes by means of external protection layers; it is that the brake itself is designed with the protection incorporated at the factory. Although it may seem the same, it is not, and although it may seem strange that it is not already incorporated, it is not.

We will review these concepts in January 2020. In the meantime, enjoy 2019, manage your own data prudently and demand that those who lend you data do the same. You will be grateful.

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