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Engadget

Engadget reporter Jon Fingas writes that MIT researchers have developed an encryption method that can secure sensitive data in neural networks without slowing machine learning systems. The method, notes Fingas, could “lead to more uses of internet-based neural networks for handling vital info, rather than forcing companies and institutions to either build expensive local equivalents or forget AI-based systems altogether.”

Science

At the International Conference on Machine Learning, MIT researchers demonstrated an adversarial attack, fooling an AI system into thinking a 3-D printed turtle was a rifle, reports Matthew Hutson for Science. Prof. Aleksander Madry explains that the ability to fool AI systems shows, “we need to rethink all of our machine learning pipeline to make it more robust.”

The Wall Street Journal

In an article for The Wall Street Journal, Prof. Stuart Madnick writes about how companies can reduce their risk of cyberattacks by improving cybersecurity training and education among employees. “It’s crucial that support and enthusiasm for increasing cybersafety be visible at every level of the organization, from top executives and middle management to the individual,” explains Madnick.

Boston Globe

Boston Globe Ideas columnist Kevin Lewis highlights a new study by MIT Sloan researchers that compares how well IT professionals and inexperienced students performed at a cybersecurity management game. Researchers concluded that because the experienced group didn’t perform better than the students, “training for better understanding of the complexities of cybersecurity is needed for decision-makers.”

Scientific American

In an article for Scientific American, Sloan research scientist Mohammad S. Jalali writes about the concerning ways hospitals are vulnerable to cyber attacks, despite being responsible for some of people’s most sensitive information. Jalali suggests that “policymakers, health care leaders and hospitals themselves should work together to make the industry as a whole less susceptible to attacks that threaten people’s privacy and their very lives.”

Forbes

Forbes contributor Joe McKendrick describes how blockchain applications “may eventually reach into every corner of the business, providing online, ‘smart contracts.’” McKendrick cites research from the Media Lab’s Senior Advisor for Blockchain Opportunities, Michael Casey, whose recent book highlights the World Food Program’s use of blockchain for food distribution.

Popular Science

In a recent paper, CSAIL researchers propose a new system, Veil, which uses servers to conceal private web browsing data from internet service providers, reports Rob Verger of Popular Science. Through this system, the provider “would only see the connection to the blinding server, which hosts the actual content” and not the website the user is visiting, explains Verger.

Fast Company Generic Logo

Anant Agarwal, president of edX, and Kalyan Veeramachaneni, a principal research scientist at LIDS, are featured on Fast Company’s 2017 list of the “Most Creative People in Business.” Agarwal is celebrated for “mastering online education,” and Veeramachaneni for developing a system that enables humans and AI to work together to detect possible security threats.

Forbes

Prof. Stuart Madnick writes for Forbes about the security threat posed by connecting household items to the internet. Madnick notes that it is, “great that computer-enabled internet-connect devices now bring wonderful new capabilities and conveniences. But there is also a need to take a broad view of the impact on our nation’s critical infrastructure.”

BBC News

Joel Brenner, former NSA inspector general and a research fellow at MIT, speaks to BBC reporter Gareth Mitchell about an MIT report that examines cyber security threats to the nation’s infrastructure. “You can have a digital network that’s not public,” says Brenner, “but you shouldn’t be able to get to the controls of critical infrastructure through the public internet.”

Boston Herald

A report from MIT’s Center for International Studies and CSAIL encourages the government to increase cybersecurity systems guarding the nation’s infrastructure, reports Jordan Graham for the Boston Herald. One suggestion from the report is to “establish incentives for owners and operators of private infrastructure who boost security,” explains Graham.

Radio Boston (WBUR)

James Brenner, the former NSA Inspector General and a research fellow at MIT, speaks with Meghna Chakrabarti of Radio Boston about a new report by MIT researchers that examines potential cyber security vulnerabilities in American infrastructure. Brenner explains that the report aims to “shine a light on what the underlying problems are both technological, commercial and political.”

New Scientist

Timothy Revell writes for New Scientist about a new report by MIT researchers that calls for securing critical U.S. infrastructure against cyberattacks. Joel Brenner, former NSA inspector general and a research fellow at the MIT Center for International Studies, explains that “we know how to fix the vulnerabilities, but there’s no market incentive for companies to do so.”

CNN

CNN reporter Selena Larson writes that MIT researchers have released a new report calling for an overhaul of the nation’s cybersecurity for critical infrastructure, like the electric grid. “For infrastructure to be protected against cyberattacks, companies and the government have to collaborate,” Larson explains. She adds that the report suggests, “incentivizing companies to mandate security upgrades.

Times Higher Education

Speaking with Ellie Bothwell of Times Higher Education, President L. Rafael Reif emphasizes MIT’s “commitment to tackling big, important problems for humanity – climate change, clean energy, cybersecurity, human health – with colleagues of every identity and background.”