AI2: Training a big data machine to defend

Kalyan Veeramachaneni1 Ignacio Arnaldo2 Alfredo Cuesta-Infante2 Vamsi Korrapati2 Costas Bassias2 Ke Li2
CSAIL & IDSS, MIT - Cambridge, MA1 PatternEx - San Jose, CA2

Press

4/19/2016 - CBS News
Artificial intelligence could help predict cyber attacks
Brian Mastroianni

4/18/2016 - Wired
MIT’s Teaching AI How to Help Stop Cyberattacks
Brian Barrett

4/18/2016 - Gizmodo
MIT’s AI Can Predict 85 Percent of Cyberattacks
Jamie Condliffe

4/18/2016 - Fast Company
Artificial Intelligence's Ultimate Challenge? Cyber Attacks
Kesley Campbell-Dollaghan

4/18/2016 - Yahoo! Tech News
MIT’s new AI-squared can predict 85 percent of cyberattacks
Lulu Chang

4/18/2016 - Engadget
MIT's digital lookout in the crows nest of cyber warfare
Daniel Cooper

4/18/2016 - Daily Mail
The AI hacker that can predict 85 per cent of cyberattacks: MIT's Minority-report style algorithm can pick up suspicious behaviour
Cheyenne MacDonald

4/18/2016 - ZD Net
MIT reveals AI platform which detects 85 percent of cyberattacks
Charlie Osborne

4/18/2016 - Tech Republic
MIT shows how AI cybersecurity excels by keeping humans in the loop
Hope Reese

4/18/2016 - PC World
AI + humans = kick-ass cybersecurity
Katherine Noyes

4/18/2016 - Information Week
MIT AI Researchers Make Breakthrough On Threat Detection
Ericka Chickowski

4/19/2016 - The Next Web
MIT’s new AI can already detect 85% of cyber attacks and is getting smarter every day
Abhimanyu Ghoshal

4/19/2016 - SD Times
Artificial intelligence system predicts cyber attacks using human input
Madison Moore

4/20/2016 - Christian Science Monitor
How this AI-human partnership takes cybersecurity to a new level
Corey Fedde

4/19/2016 - International Business Times
MIT develops system that can detect 85% of cyberattacks using artificial intelligence
Mary-Ann Russon

4/19/2016 - Business Insider
MIT scientists have built an AI that can detect 85% of cyber attacks — but it still needs human help
Sam Shead

4/18/2016 - MIT News
System Predicts 85 Percent of Cyber-Attacks Using Input From Human Experts
Adam Conner-Simons