+ 4

Worms, viruses and "Machine learning"

I was just wondering if, by using machine learning, can malwares spread across the Internet, become stronger over time and become invulnerable to any solutions??? (Just a random thought, I don't wanna see the world burn)

19th Apr 2018, 4:15 PM
android baloch
android baloch - avatar
6 Respuestas
+ 10
If there really is some kind of self-learning worm out there, then all we need is a self-learning antivirus software. :>
19th Apr 2018, 5:27 PM
Hatsy Rei
Hatsy Rei - avatar
+ 5
FireEye uses ML in their malware defense / adaptive cloud. I think...a meaningful step towards invulnerability would require an AI to exceed its container, i.e., grasp and prepare for physical universe contingencies.
19th Apr 2018, 9:30 PM
Kirk Schafer
Kirk Schafer - avatar
+ 1
Can you clearify the phrase "They can be EASY DIFFICULT to manipulate"???
19th Apr 2018, 4:31 PM
android baloch
android baloch - avatar
+ 1
What I meant was some are easy but also difficult if that makes sens
19th Apr 2018, 9:33 PM
<i>TheOfficialOdyssey</i>
<i>TheOfficialOdyssey</i> - avatar
0
me too XD...but yeah i think it is possible for them to spread but i also think they can be stopped because if you think about it its human made and human made things are very easy difficulty to manipulate
19th Apr 2018, 4:24 PM
<i>TheOfficialOdyssey</i>
<i>TheOfficialOdyssey</i> - avatar
0
Fight machine learning with... machine learning. Just as malware can do it, so can cyber security solutions (check out Cyberbit) do it and mimic the malware's varying patterns. I don't think there's something completely immune.
30th Aug 2018, 11:50 AM
Alex Fisher
Alex Fisher - avatar