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2025-01-25
More than a decade after installation, the art adorning the south side of Victoria’s breakwater once again stands out in full colour. After months of weather challenges and material delays, the Victoria Harbour Authority happily announced on Nov. 21 that Jesse Campbell’s restoration work on the Unity Wall on the breakwater is complete. “Thank you to Jesse Campbell, Metis mural painter and original Unity Wall youth artist, for your tireless work and dedication to this project,” the authority said on social media. Campbell was part of the 2013 team that installed the works originally designed by Butch Dick and Darlene Gait of the Songhees and Xwsepsum nations. The project was completed after they finished painting the third phase of the Na'tsa'maht Panel mural – a significant work – over the summer of 2013. “To my knowledge, the Na’tsa’maht mural on the north side is the longest-designed mural in North America at over 1200 feet long and 8 feet high,” Campbell said on social media Nov. 21. "For a time there was talk about taking half of the Rock Bay mural ... also designed by Butch and Darlene, and installing it to extend the length by over 100 feet. This would’ve made the Na’tsa’maht one of the longest continuous murals in the world." Many things made the breakwater a challenging surface to work on, Campbell mentioned. "It is subject to harsh waves, high UV exposure, wind, and public interference. The 107-year-old concrete and stone wall weeps trapped moisture making proper contact adhesion difficult even during the dry months.” Prior to this work, the artist also did partial restoration of the same mural in the summer of 2018. Over the course of the project, 18 main designs were repainted and 22 resealed. Twenty-six split wolf heads were refreshed and 44 blue and sand wolf heads were restored. To abate wave erosion, a thick layer of silicone-based anti-graffiti coating was applied to seal each main design, ensuring the colourful art can continue to last for years to come. A post shared by Jesse Campbell (@jesc_art)casinocoke

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson vowed on Thursday to remain in the race despite a CNN report that he posted strongly worded racial and sexual comments on an online message board, saying he won’t be forced out by “salacious tabloid lies.” Robinson, the sitting lieutenant governor who decisively won his GOP gubernatorial primary in March, has been trailing in several recent polls to Democratic nominee Josh Stein, the current attorney general. “We are staying in this race. We are in it to win it,” Robinson said in a video posted Thursday on the social media platform X. “And we know that with your help, we will.” Robinson referenced in the video a story that he said CNN was running, but he didn't give details. “Let me reassure you the things that you will see in that story — those are not the words of Mark Robinson," he said. "You know my words. You know my character.” The CNN report describes a series of racial and sexual comments Robinson posted on the message board of a pornography website more than a decade ago. CNN reported that Robinson, who would be North Carolina’s first Black governor, attacked civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. in searing terms and once referred to himself as a “black NAZI.” CNN also reported that Robinson wrote of being aroused by a memory of “peeping” women in gym showers when he was 14 along with an appreciation of transgender pornography. Robinson at one point referred to himself as a “perv,” according to CNN. The Associated Press has not independently confirmed that Robinson wrote and posted the messages. CNN said it matched details of the account on the pornographic website forum to other online accounts held by Robinson by comparing usernames, a known email address and his full name. CNN reported that details discussed by the account holder matched Robinson’s age, length of marriage and other biographical information. It also compared figures of speech that were used in his public Facebook profile and that appeared in discussions by the account on the pornographic website. Media outlets already have reported about a 2021 speech by Robinson in a church in which he used the word “filth” when discussing gay and transgender people. Robinson has a history of inflammatory comments that Stein has said made him too extreme to lead North Carolina. They already have contributed to the prospect that campaign struggles for Robinson would hurt former President Donald Trump to win the battleground state’s 16 electoral votes, and potential other GOP downballot candidates. Recent polls of North Carolina voters show Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris locked in a close race. The same polls show Stein with a roughly 10-point lead over Robinson. Stein and his allies have repeatedly cited a Facebook post from 2019 in which Robinson said abortion in America was about “killing the child because you weren’t responsible enough to keep your skirt down.” The Stein campaign said in a statement after the report that “North Carolinians already know Mark Robinson is completely unfit to be Governor.” State law says a gubernatorial nominee could withdraw as a candidate no later than the day before the first absentee ballots requested by military and overseas voters are distributed. That begins Friday, so the withdrawal deadline would be late Thursday. State Republican leaders could then pick a replacement. Trump has frequently voiced his support for Robinson, who has been considered a rising star in his party, well-known for his fiery speeches and evocative rhetoric. Ahead of the March primary, Trump at a rally in Greensboro called Robinson “Martin Luther King on steroids” for his speaking ability. Trump’s campaign appears to be distancing itself from Robinson in the wake of the report. In a statement to the AP, Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said the GOP nominee’s campaign “is focused on winning the White House and saving this country,” calling North Carolina “a vital part of that plan.” Leavitt went on to contrast Trump’s economic record with that of Harris, not mentioning Robinson by name or answering questions as to whether he would appear with Trump at a Saturday campaign rally in Wilmington, or had been invited to do so. A spokesperson for Harris’ campaign, Ammar Moussa, said on X that “Donald Trump has a Mark Robinson problem” and reposted a photo of the two together. The North Carolina Republican Party defended Robinson in a statement on X, saying that despite his denial of CNN's report, it wouldn't “stop the Left from trying to demonize him via personal attacks.” The party referred to economic and immigration policies as the predominant election issues North Carolinians will care more about instead. “The Left needs this election to be a personality contest, not a policy contest because if voters focused on policy, Republicans win on Election Day," the party said. Scott Lassiter, a Republican state Senate candidate in a Raleigh-area swing district, did call on Robinson to “suspend his campaign to allow a quality candidate to finish this race.” Ed Broyhill, a North Carolina member of the Republican National Committee, said he spoke to Robinson Thursday afternoon and still supports him as the nominee. In an interview, Broyhill suggested the online details may have been fabricated. “It seems like a dirty trick to me,” Broyhill said. On Capitol Hill, U.S. Rep. Richard Hudson of North Carolina, chair of the House GOP’s campaign committee, told reporters the report’s findings were “concerning.” Robinson, he said, has some reassuring to do in the state. Robinson, 56, was elected lieutenant governor in his first bid for public office in 2020. He tells a life story of childhood poverty, jobs that he blames the North American Free Trade Agreement for ending, and personal bankruptcy. His four-minute speech to the Greensboro City Council defending gun rights and lamenting the “demonizing” of police officers went viral — and led him to a National Rifle Association board position and popularity among conservative voters. This story was first published on Sep. 19, 2024. It was updated on Nov. 22, 2024 to correct which of Robinson’s social media accounts CNN cited in a comparison to language in messages from a pornographic website message board. CNN cited his public Facebook account, not his Twitter account. Associated Press writer Meg Kinnard in Chapin, South Carolina, and Congressional Correspondent Lisa Mascaro in Washington contributed to this report.

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NoneThe Reform UK leader pushed back against reports suggesting that legal action would be the next step, saying he would make a decision in the next couple of days about his response if there is no apology for the “crazy conspiracy theory”. Mr Farage also said the party has “opened up our systems” to media outlets, including The Daily Telegraph and The Financial Times, in the interests of “full transparency to verify that our numbers are correct”. His remarks came after Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch accused Mr Farage of “fakery” in response to Reform claiming they had surpassed the Tories in signed-up members. Mrs Badenoch said Reform’s counter was “coded to tick up automatically”. A digital counter on the Reform website showed a membership tally before lunchtime on Boxing Day ticking past the 131,680 figure declared by the Conservative Party during its leadership election earlier this year. Mr Farage, on whether he was threatening legal action or not, told the PA news agency: “I haven’t threatened anything. I’ve just said that unless I get an apology, I will take some action. “I haven’t said whether it’s legal or anything.” He added: “All I’ve said is I want an apology. If I don’t get an apology, I will take action. “I will decide in the next couple of days what that is. So I’ve not specified what it is.” Mr Farage, on the move to make membership data available to media organisations, said: “We feel our arguments are fully validated. “She (Mrs Badenoch) has put out this crazy conspiracy theory and she needs to apologise.” On why Mrs Badenoch had reacted as she did, Mr Farage said: “I would imagine she was at home without anybody advising her and was just angry.” Mr Farage, in a statement issued on social media site X, also said: “The accusations of fraud and dishonesty made against me yesterday were disgraceful. “Today we opened up our systems to The Telegraph, Spectator, Sky News and FT in the interests of full transparency to verify that our data is correct. “I am now demanding Kemi Badenoch apologises.” A Conservative Party source claimed Mr Farage was “rattled” that his Boxing Day “publicity stunt is facing serious questions”. They added: “Like most normal people around the UK, Kemi is enjoying Christmas with her family and looking forward to taking on the challenges of renewing the Conservative Party in the New Year.” Mrs Badenoch, in a series of messages posted on X on Thursday, said: “Farage doesn’t understand the digital age. This kind of fakery gets found out pretty quickly, although not before many are fooled.” There were 131,680 Conservative members eligible to vote during the party’s leadership election to replace Rishi Sunak in the autumn. Mrs Badenoch claimed in her thread that “the Conservative Party has gained thousands of new members since the leadership election”. Elsewhere, Mr Farage described Elon Musk as a “bloody hero” and said he believes the US billionaire can help attract younger voters to Reform. Tech entrepreneur Mr Musk met Mr Farage earlier this month at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, amid rumours of a possible donation to either Mr Farage or Reform. Mr Farage told The Daily Telegraph newspaper: “The shades, the bomber jacket, the whole vibe. Elon makes us cool – Elon is a huge help to us with the young generation, and that will be the case going on and, frankly, that’s only just starting. “Reform only wins the next election if it gets the youth vote. The youth vote is the key. Of course, you need voters of all ages, but if you get a wave of youth enthusiasm you can change everything. “And I think we’re beginning to get into that zone – we were anyway, but Elon makes the whole task much, much easier. And the idea that politics can be cool, politics can be fun, politics can be real – Elon helps us with that mission enormously.”Stock market today: Wall Street closes higher as the Dow reaches another record

* Beat Ford in 1976, lost by landslide to Reagan in 1980 * Egypt-Israel peace was top diplomatic accomplishment * Iran hostage crisis consumed last 444 days of presidency * In 1979, he bemoaned America's 'crisis of confidence' * Won 2002 Nobel Peace Prize for peacemaker work By Will Dunham WASHINGTON, , 2024 - Jimmy Carter, the earnest Georgia peanut farmer who as U.S. president struggled with a bad economy and the Iran hostage crisis but brokered peace between Israel and Egypt and later received the Nobel Peace Prize for his humanitarian work, has died, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported on Sunday. He was 100. A Democrat, he served as president from January 1977 to January 1981 after defeating incumbent Republican President Gerald Ford in the 1976 U.S. election. Carter was swept from office four years later in an electoral landslide as voters embraced Republican challenger Ronald Reagan, the former actor and California governor. Carter lived longer after his term in office than any other U.S. president. Along the way, he earned a reputation as a better former president than he was a president - a status he readily acknowledged. His one-term presidency was marked by the highs of the 1978 Camp David accords between Israel and Egypt, bringing some stability to the Middle East. But it was dogged by an economy in recession, persistent unpopularity and the embarrassment of the Iran hostage crisis that consumed his final 444 days in office. In recent years, Carter had experienced several health issues including melanoma that spread to his liver and brain. Carter decided to receive hospice care in February 2023 instead of undergoing additional medical intervention. His wife, Rosalynn Carter, died on Nov. 19, 2023, at age 96. He looked frail when he attended her memorial service and funeral in a wheelchair. Carter left office profoundly unpopular but worked energetically for decades on humanitarian causes. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 in recognition of his "untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development." Carter had been a centrist as governor of Georgia with populist tendencies when he moved into the White House as the 39th U.S. president. He was a Washington outsider at a time when America was still reeling from the Watergate scandal that led Republican Richard Nixon to resign as president in 1974 and elevated Ford from vice president. "I'm Jimmy Carter and I'm running for president. I will never lie to you," Carter promised with an ear-to-ear smile. Asked to assess his presidency, Carter said in a 1991 documentary: "The biggest failure we had was a political failure. I never was able to convince the American people that I was a forceful and strong leader." Despite his difficulties in office, Carter had few rivals for accomplishments as a former president. He gained global acclaim as a tireless human rights advocate, a voice for the disenfranchised and a leader in the fight against hunger and poverty, winning the respect that eluded him in the White House. Carter won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002 for his efforts to promote human rights and resolve conflicts around the world, from Ethiopia and Eritrea to Bosnia and Haiti. His Carter Center in Atlanta sent international election-monitoring delegations to polls around the world. A Southern Baptist Sunday school teacher since his teens, Carter brought a strong sense of morality to the presidency, speaking openly about his religious faith. He also sought to take some pomp out of an increasingly imperial presidency - walking, rather than riding in a limousine, in his 1977 inauguration parade. The Middle East was the focus of Carter's foreign policy. The 1979 Egypt-Israel peace treaty, based on the 1978 Camp David accords, ended a state of war between the two neighbors. Carter brought Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland for talks. Later, as the accords seemed to be unraveling, Carter saved the day by flying to Cairo and Jerusalem for personal shuttle diplomacy. The treaty provided for Israeli withdrawal from Egypt's Sinai Peninsula and establishment of diplomatic relations. Begin and Sadat each won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1978. By the 1980 election, the overriding issues were double-digit inflation, interest rates that exceeded 20% and soaring gas prices, as well as the Iran hostage crisis that brought humiliation to America. These issues marred Carter's presidency and undermined his chances of winning a second term. HOSTAGE CRISIS On Nov. 4, 1979, revolutionaries devoted to Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini had stormed the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, seized the Americans present and demanded the return of the ousted shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who was backed by the United States and was being treated in a U.S. hospital. The American public initially rallied behind Carter. But his support faded in April 1980 when a commando raid failed to rescue the hostages, with eight U.S. soldiers killed in an aircraft accident in the Iranian desert. Carter's final ignominy was that Iran held the 52 hostages until minutes after Reagan took his oath of office on Jan. 20, 1981, to replace Carter, then released the planes carrying them to freedom. In another crisis, Carter protested the former Soviet Union's 1979 invasion of Afghanistan by boycotting the 1980 Olympics in Moscow. He also asked the U.S. Senate to defer consideration of a major nuclear arms accord with Moscow. Unswayed, the Soviets remained in Afghanistan for a decade. Carter won narrow Senate approval in 1978 of a treaty to transfer the Panama Canal to the control of Panama despite critics who argued the waterway was vital to American security. He also completed negotiations on full U.S. ties with China. Carter created two new U.S. Cabinet departments - education and energy. Amid high gas prices, he said America's "energy crisis" was "the moral equivalent of war" and urged the country to embrace conservation. "Ours is the most wasteful nation on earth," he told Americans in 1977. In 1979, Carter delivered what became known as his "malaise" speech to the nation, although he never used that word. "After listening to the American people I have been reminded again that all the legislation in the world can't fix what's wrong with America," he said in his televised address. "The threat is nearly invisible in ordinary ways. It is a crisis of confidence. It is a crisis that strikes at the very heart and soul and spirit of our national will. The erosion of our confidence in the future is threatening to destroy the social and the political fabric of America." As president, the strait-laced Carter was embarrassed by the behavior of his hard-drinking younger brother, Billy Carter, who had boasted: "I got a red neck, white socks, and Blue Ribbon beer." 'THERE YOU GO AGAIN' Jimmy Carter withstood a challenge from Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy for the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination but was politically diminished heading into his general election battle against a vigorous Republican adversary. Reagan, the conservative who projected an image of strength, kept Carter off balance during their debates before the November 1980 election. Reagan dismissively told Carter, "There you go again," when the Republican challenger felt the president had misrepresented Reagan's views during one debate. Carter lost the 1980 election to Reagan, who won 44 of the 50 states and amassed an Electoral College landslide. James Earl Carter Jr. was born on Oct. 1, 1924, in Plains, Georgia, one of four children of a farmer and shopkeeper. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1946, served in the nuclear submarine program and left to manage the family peanut farming business. He married his wife, Rosalynn, in 1946, a union he called "the most important thing in my life." They had three sons and a daughter. Carter became a millionaire, a Georgia state legislator and Georgia's governor from 1971 to 1975. He mounted an underdog bid for the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination, and out-hustled his rivals for the right to face Ford in the general election. With Walter Mondale as his vice presidential running mate, Carter was given a boost by a major Ford gaffe during one of their debates. Ford said that "there is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe and there never will be under a Ford administration," despite decades of just such domination. Carter edged Ford in the election, even though Ford actually won more states - 27 to Carter's 23. Not all of Carter's post-presidential work was appreciated. Former President George W. Bush and his father, former President George H.W. Bush, both Republicans, were said to have been displeased by Carter's freelance diplomacy in Iraq and elsewhere. In 2004, Carter called the Iraq war launched in 2003 by the younger Bush one of the most "gross and damaging mistakes our nation ever made." He called George W. Bush's administration "the worst in history" and said Vice President Dick Cheney was "a disaster for our country." In 2019, Carter questioned Republican Donald Trump's legitimacy as president, saying "he was put into office because the Russians interfered on his behalf." Trump responded by calling Carter "a terrible president." Carter also made trips to communist North Korea. A 1994 visit defused a nuclear crisis, as President Kim Il Sung agreed to freeze his nuclear program in exchange for resumed dialogue with the United States. That led to a deal in which North Korea, in return for aid, promised not to restart its nuclear reactor or reprocess the plant's spent fuel. But Carter irked Democratic President Bill Clinton's administration by announcing the deal with North Korea's leader without first checking with Washington. In 2010, Carter won the release of an American sentenced to eight years hard labor for illegally entering North Korea. Carter wrote more than two dozen books, ranging from a presidential memoir to a children's book and poetry, as well as works about religious faith and diplomacy. His book "Faith: A Journey for All," was published in 2018. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More With 77% of enterprises already victimized by adversarial AI attacks and eCrime actors achieving a record breakout time of just 2 minutes and 7 seconds , the question isn’t if your Security Operations Center (SOC) will be targeted — it’s when. As cloud intrusions soared by 75% in the past year , and two in five enterprises suffered AI-related security breaches , every SOC leader needs to confront a brutal truth: Your defenses must either evolve as fast as the attackers’ tradecraft or risk being overrun by relentless, resourceful adversaries who pivot in seconds to succeed with a breach. Combining generative AI (gen AI), social engineering, interactive intrusion campaigns and an all-out assault on cloud vulnerabilities and identities, attackers are executing a playbook that seeks to capitalize on every SOC weakness they can find. CrowdStrike’s 2024 Global Threat Report finds that nation-state attackers are taking identity-based and social engineering attacks to a new level of intensity. Nation-states have long used machine learning to craft phishing and social engineering campaigns. Now, the focus is on pirating authentication tools and systems including API keys and one-time passwords (OTPs). “What we’re seeing is that the threat actors have really been focused on...taking a legitimate identity. Logging in as a legitimate user. And then laying low, staying under the radar by living off the land by using legitimate tools,” Adam Meyers, senior vice president counter adversary operations at CrowdStrike, told VentureBeat during a recent briefing. Cybercrime gangs and nation-state cyberwar teams continue sharpening their tradecraft to launch AI-based attacks aimed at undermining the foundation of identity and access management (IAM) trust. By exploiting fake identities generated through deepfake voice, image and video data, these attacks aim to breach IAM systems and create chaos in a targeted organization. The Gartner figure below shows why SOC teams need to be prepared now for adversarial AI attacks, which most often take the form of fake identity attacks. Source: Gartner 2025 Planning Guide for Identity and Access Management. Published on October 14, 2024. Document ID: G00815708. Scoping the adversarial AI threat landscape going into 2025 “As gen AI continues to evolve, so must the understanding of its implications for cybersecurity ,” Bob Grazioli, CIO and senior vice president of Ivanti , recently told VentureBeat. “Undoubtedly, gen AI equips cybersecurity professionals with powerful tools, but it also provides attackers with advanced capabilities. To counter this, new strategies are needed to prevent malicious AI from becoming a dominant threat. This report helps equip organizations with the insights needed to stay ahead of advanced threats and safeguard their digital assets effectively,” Grazioli said. A recent Gartner survey revealed that 73% of enterprises have hundreds or thousands of AI models deployed, while 41% reported AI-related security incidents. According to HiddenLayer , seven in 10 companies have experienced AI-related breaches, with 60% linked to insider threats and 27% involving external attacks targeting AI infrastructure. Nir Zuk, CTO of Palo Alto Networks , framed it starkly in an interview with VentureBeat earlier this year: Machine learning assumes adversaries are already inside, and this demands real-time responsiveness to stealthy attacks. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University recently published “ Current State of LLM Risks and AI Guardrails ,” a paper that explains the vulnerabilities of large language models (LLMs) in critical applications. It highlights risks such as bias, data poisoning and non-reproducibility. With security leaders and SOC teams increasingly collaborating on new model safety measures, the guidelines advocated by these researchers need to be part of SOC teams’ training and ongoing development. These guidelines include deploying layered protection models that integrate retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) and situational awareness tools to counter adversarial exploitation. SOC teams also carry the support burden for new gen AI applications, including the rapidly growing use of agentic AI. Researchers from the University of California, Davis recently published “ Security of AI Agents ,” a study examining the security challenges SOC teams face as AI agents execute real-world tasks. Threats including data integrity breaches and model pollution, where adversarial inputs may compromise the agent’s decisions and actions, are deconstructed and analyzed. To counter these risks, the researchers propose defenses such as having SOC teams initiate and manage sandboxing — limiting the agent’s operational scope — and encrypted workflows that protect sensitive interactions, creating a controlled environment to contain potential exploits. Why SOCs are targets of adversarial AI Dealing with alert fatigue, turnover of key staff, incomplete and inconsistent data on threats, and systems designed to protect perimeters and not identities, SOC teams are at a disadvantage against attackers’ growing AI arsenals. SOC leaders in financial services, insurance and manufacturing tell VentureBeat, under the condition of anonymity, that their companies are under siege, with a high number of high-risk alerts coming in every day. The techniques below focus on ways AI models can be compromised such that, once breached, they provide sensitive data and can be used to pivot to other systems and assets within the enterprise. Attackers’ tactics focus on establishing a foothold that leads to deeper network penetration. Reinforcing SOC defenses through AI model hardening and supply chain security SOC teams need to think holistically about how a seemingly isolated breach of AL/ML models could quickly escalate into an enterprise-wide cyberattack. SOC leaders need to take the initiative and identify which security and risk management frameworks are the most complementary to their company’s business model. Great starting points are the NIST AI Risk Management Framework and the NIST AI Risk Management Framework and Playbook . VentureBeat is seeing that the following steps are delivering results by reinforcing defenses while also enhancing model reliability — two critical steps to securing a company’s infrastructure against adversarial AI attacks: Commit to continually hardening model architectures. Deploy gatekeeper layers to filter out malicious prompts and tie models to verified data sources. Address potential weak points at the pretraining stage so your models withstand even the most advanced adversarial tactics. Never stop strengthing data integrity and provenance: Never assume all data is trustworthy. Validate its origins, quality and integrity through rigorous checks and adversarial input testing. By ensuring only clean, reliable data enters the pipeline, SOCs can do their part to maintain the accuracy and credibility of outputs. Integrate adversarial validation and red-teaming: Don’t wait for attackers to find your blind spots. Continually pressure-test models against known and emerging threats. Use red teams to uncover hidden vulnerabilities, challenge assumptions and drive immediate remediation — ensuring defenses evolve in lockstep with attacker strategies. Enhance threat intelligence integration: SOC leaders need to support devops teams and help keep models in sync with current risks. SOC leaders need to provide devops teams with a steady stream of updated threat intelligence and simulate real-world attacker tactics using red-teaming. Increase and keep enforcing supply chain transparency: Identify and neutralize threats before they take root in codebases or pipelines. Regularly audit repositories, dependencies and CI/CD workflows. Treat every component as a potential risk, and use red-teaming to expose hidden gaps — fostering a secure, transparent supply chain. Employ privacy-preserving techniques and secure collaboration: Leverage techniques like federated learning and homomorphic encryption to let stakeholders contribute without revealing confidential information. This approach broadens AI expertise without increasing exposure. Implement session management, sandboxing, and zero trust starting with microsegmentation: Lock down access and movement across your network by segmenting sessions, isolating risky operations in sandboxed environments and strictly enforcing zero-trust principles. Under zero trust, no user, device or process is inherently trusted without verification. These measures curb lateral movement, containing threats at their point of origin. They safeguard system integrity, availability and confidentiality. In general, they have proven effective in stopping advanced adversarial AI attacks. Conclusion “CISO and CIO alignment will be critical in 2025,” Grazioli told VentureBeat. “Executives need to consolidate resources — budgets, personnel, data and technology — to enhance an organization’s security posture. A lack of data accessibility and visibility undermines AI investments. To address this, data silos between departments such as the CIO and CISO must be eliminated.” “In the coming year, we will need to view AI as an employee rather than a tool,” Grazioli noted. “For instance, prompt engineers must now anticipate the types of questions that would typically be asked of AI, highlighting how ingrained AI has become in everyday business activities. To ensure accuracy, AI will need to be trained and evaluated just like any other employee.” Stay in the know! Get the latest news in your inbox daily By subscribing, you agree to VentureBeat's Terms of Service. Thanks for subscribing. Check out more VB newsletters here . An error occured.There’s Still Time for Biden to Clear Death Row. Will He?NexOptic Technology (CVE:NXO) Shares Down 20% – Here’s Why

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