IBM has launched new cybersecurity measures aimed at countering attacks that utilize advanced AI models. The offering integrates a cybersecurity assessment service with an autonomous security service.
This initiative reflects increasing concerns in the industry that new AI systems enable attackers to pinpoint weaknesses quickly and automate aspects of the attack process. Traditional security operations, relying on fragmented tools, struggle to keep pace with threats that move at machine speed, according to IBM.
One component of the announcement is a cybersecurity assessment focused on risks associated with frontier AI models. Designed for complex IT environments, the service helps large organizations determine their preparedness against autonomous threats by identifying security gaps, policy weaknesses, and AI-specific exposures.
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The assessment aims to provide mitigation guidance and suggest operational improvements for security practices. IBM stated this service would be delivered alongside technology partners across customer environments.
The second part of the launch, IBM Autonomous Security, is characterized as a multi-agent decision-making service that automates security operations across an organization’s existing security framework. The service analyzes software vulnerabilities and runtime environments to trace potential exploit paths while enhancing overall security hygiene.
It integrates with governance and risk systems to maintain up-to-date compliance and security statuses. This approach signifies a shift toward real-time response capabilities and aims to counteract the broader spread of cyber risks across large organizations.
The announcement comes amid rising pressure on businesses and public sector entities to fortify defenses against more automated attacks. Security groups have warned that AI tools can reduce the expertise required for sophisticated attacks and streamline the execution of these campaigns.
Large enterprises often face challenges due to complex infrastructures, outdated systems, and disconnected security tools, complicating risk management and incident response. IBM’s new services aim to bridge these gaps by identifying vulnerabilities and reducing the delay between threat detection and remediation.
Mark Hughes, global managing partner of cybersecurity services at IBM Consulting, emphasized the need for a shift in defensive strategies. “Frontier models are creating a new category of enterprise threat that is fast-moving, systemic, and increasingly autonomous,” he stated. “AI-powered offense demands AI-powered defense. That’s what IBM is delivering.”
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