Every cloud infrastructure can be infiltrated; it’s an inconvenient truth. But employing Generative AI for CIRA and CDR (Cloud Threat Detection, Investigation and Response Automation), an emerging cyber security technology, coined by Gartner on their most recent Hype Cycle, is proving to be a scalable response, at least according to Israeli startup Skyhawk Security.
With the rising cloud usage and increasing sophistication of malicious Generative AI for hacking techniques, we’re quickly heading to a future akin to the wild-wild-west of cyber activity and enterprise vulnerability. Nowadays, hacking is not reserved for versed cyber criminals, everyday folk can take part due to the ease of use of Generative AI tools. Spend a few minutes on ChatGPT and voila: you’ve got a convincing email ready to compromise the network of a fortune 500 company impersonating a pressing email from the CEO. Up the ante and subscribe to WormGPT or FraudGPT: Large Language Models (LLMs) built on GPT-J designed to circumvent safeguards enforced by GPT LLMs when prompted for malicious intents, like writing malware code (but with some clever prompting, the same has been demonstrated to be achieved on ChatGPT). You’re now equipped to generate malware and send a phishing email to fool an unsuspecting employee into downloading it on their organization’s network and wreak havoc.
Inside the enterprise, where the majority of operations are conducted and stored in the cloud, and where an incident can result in a multi-million dollar loss, cloud security is rapidly unraveling and vulnerabilities are growing at an incomprehensible rate. In large part thanks to the rise of Generative AI. Last year, Thales Global Cloud Security Study found that 45% of businesses experienced a data breach in their cloud environment. This year’s figures will likely top that. There’s too much exposure and low hanging fruit for hackers, like misconfigurations, insecure interfaces and APIs, unauthorized access points or DDoS attack vulnerability. “I’m getting calls everyday and it’s only intensifying,” said Chen Burshan, the CEO of Skyhawk Security, an Israeli startup attempting to secure the entire cloud landscape. Their unique approach is proving formidable among the cloud security community; using Generative AI to stop a potential threat in its tracks, but in real-time and not after-the-fact.
Skyhawk Security is attempting to reshape the cloud security landscape with their Generative AI powered Shift Left CDR (Cloud Detection and Response) and Cloud Security Posture Management (CSPM) technology.
In 2022, Skyhawk was spun off from Radware, an industry veteran in cybersecurity. The board’s decision to make it a standalone entity has proven astute. Earlier this year, the company secured $35 million in funding from Tiger Global Management and brought in industry veteran Chen Burshan, formerly GM and led the Israeli site at Dome9—a cloud security company acquired by Check Point at 2018.
