The National Security Agency and U.S. Cyber Command both recently completed their own studies on how they will use artificial intelligence in the future, the organizations’ leaders announced Tuesday.
“We’ve been doing this for a long time… AI is something we’re all familiar with,” Army Gen. Paul Nakasone said at the Billington Cybersecurity Summit in Washington, D.C.
The event is sponsored by Recorded Future, the parent company of The Record.
Concerns that AI could increase U.S. national security challenges have recently been growing across the federal government, all the way to the White House. Top AI companies in July signed voluntary undertaking The company says it will proceed with technological development with safety and security as its top priority.
Nakasone said the NSA recently completed a 60-day study that detailed the impact generative AI would have.
The intelligence agency is already applying the technology to signals intelligence missions, but is looking to expand its application to cybersecurity as well as “business functions” such as accounting and compliance, he said.
Nakasone also noted that Congress’s recent defense policy bill requires Cyber Command to develop a five-year plan for how digital warfare forces will utilize AI in future cyberspace operations. Mentioned.
“We have a five-year plan,” he confirmed, without providing details.
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