HomeLatest NewsCyber SecurityUniversity of Missouri researchers develop AI system to combat digital intrusions

University of Missouri researchers develop AI system to combat digital intrusions

Preferred Source of Google

With almost every online purchase, a person’s personal information — name, date of birth and number — is stored electronically often in the “cloud,” which is a network of internet servers. Now, as more people buy from online businesses, researchers at the University of Missouri hope to employ a new strategy in the ongoing struggle to protect digital information in the cloud from targeted cyberattacks. The strategy establishes a new artificial intelligence system to combat digital intrusions.

“We are interested in the targeted attacks where the attacker is trying to exploit data or critical infrastructure resources, such as blocking data access, tampering facts or stealing data,” said Prasad Calyam, associate professor of electrical engineering and computer and the director of Education and Research Initiative in the MU College of Engineering.

“Attackers are trying to use peoples’ compromised resources to infiltrate their data without their knowledge, and these attacks are becoming increasingly significant because attackers are realizing they can make money in a big way like never before,” said Calyam.

Advertisement
Infosec Reimagined
Infosec Reimagined
Infosec Reimagined 2026 is the premier information security summit where top leaders—CISOs, CROs, CIOs, CTOs and risk executives—converge to redefine cyber resilience.
Register Now →
Digital Senate
Digital Senate
Digital Senate is a premier conference uniting government leaders, technologists and innovators to share ideas, success stories and strategies on digital governance, public sector transformation, cybersecurity and emerging technologies in India.
Register Now →
CIO Prism
CIO Prism
CIO Prism unites forward-thinking technology leaders to exchange transformative insights, shape digital strategies, and foster innovation, empowering enterprises to excel in an era of rapid technological change.
Register Now →

In this study, the researchers focused on two types of cyberattacks – those seeking customer data and those stealing resources such as bitcoins, a type of digital currency. Their strategy uses artificial intelligence techniques and psychology principles — giving the cyberattacker false hope that the attack is working.

“Our ‘defense by pretense’ system quarantines the attacker and allows the cloud operators to buy time and build a stronger defense for their systems,” Calyam said. “The quarantine is a decoy that behaves very similar to the real compromised target to keep the attacker assuming that the attack is still succeeding. In a typical cyberattack the more deeply attackers go in the system, the more they have the ability to go many directions. It becomes like a Whack-A-Mole for those defending the system. Our strategy simply changes the game, but makes the attackers think they are being successful.”

Researchers say buying time is important because it allows those directing the cyber resources to devise a more sophisticated defensive strategy to use at a later time when the cyber-attacker returns to make a more vigorous attack knowing that valuable assets are being defended.

Get the day's headlines from Tech Observer straight in your inbox

By subscribing you agree to our Privacy Policy, T&C and consent to receive newsletters and other important communications.
Tech Observer Desk
Tech Observer Desk
Tech Observer Desk at TechObserver.in is a team of technology reporters led by a senior editor who brings latest updates and developments from the world of technology.
- Advertisement -
Powered By Veeam Logo
- Advertisement -

Subscribe to our Newsletter

By subscribing you agree to our Privacy Policy, T&C and consent to receive newsletters and other important communications.
- Advertisement -

India will be the next big AI market, says F5’s Asia-Pacific head

Adam Judd, SVP Sales – APCJ, F5, says that while the US and China moved first, the fundamentals now point squarely at India for the next wave of AI infrastructure build-out.

RELATED ARTICLES