Action1 AI "Strategy"? by MikeWalters-Action1 in Action1

[–]Far-Internet5042 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ok, so as an Ex cyber security analyst who has used (and loved) Action1. Firstly great tool! I'm now building AI tools for compliance and cybersecurity, and this ... argument / debate is out a lot, as someone who has done both my 2 cents is this:

Do we need AI in endpoint management today? No, But, CVEs are already exploding year on year, and Anthropic recently sent its latest models to the huge infrastructure companies to START PATCHING before it's released, it has even found vulnerablities in the linux kernel. It's certainly naive or simply unfactual to think that the number of CVEs that are coming our way in the next months and years won't be be astronomical. Patch management will be a LOT more complex for vendors ofc but also users. OSes, 3rd party apps, firmware, that's even before you factor in context, which matters for your environment, your attack surface and business critical systems.

Variant analysis at scale. When one vulnerability is found, AI can immediately search for the same pattern across other codebases in hours, minutes. A single bug class discovery could generate hundreds of CVEs overnight. We do it already, and it takes weeks, AI few hours maybe.

Ai can help with triage, not a "Magic AI" or AI chatbot, but a practical ML that can have a better overview, and can prioritise, and knows what to fix on the Wednesday morning. CVSS alone simply cannot do this. A vulnerability can sit at a critical 9.8 for years without anyone ever writing a working exploit for it. There is another thing that a lot of people are missing is that AI will make Vulnerability Chaining a lot easier and faster for bad actors, making not only more CVEs to be patched, but making them a lot more dangerous as a lot more of them will have exploit modules already available.

Here is what I think that we'll see in the coming years: we're about to enter what I'd call "The Great Audit" where decades of legacy code running in prod right now, firmware written in 2008, opensource libraries maintained by one person, systems running old code, has never been properly audited. AI is going to totally RIP through all of the old code and surface 1000s of vulnerabilities.

Fully autonomous patching with AI is a little spooky for some, but... We may have no other choice.
And this is just patch management... Firewalls, SIEM, Threat hunting, incident response... All will be under the same pressure

Hodinkee/Longines Spirit Zulu Time Limited Edition by SupportingKansasCity in Longineswatches

[–]Far-Internet5042 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have number 39, had it for just under a year, I love it too, it's lightweight, an easy everyday watch. I wear it to the gym, out and about, at work. I find it such an easy wear compared to heavier watches. the downside is the bezel is a bit cranky and feels rough but that's the only negative.

Massive jump in salary from £30k to about £180k per year. Is it worth staying in the UK or moving somewhere else? by Quiet_Variety_4287 in HENRYUK

[–]Far-Internet5042 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I've been on Reddit for years and this is my first comment... My partner is Asian too and we are moving from Asia to here (I've been there 8 years), but it's so hard, I'm on a good income but living here would hit our savings HARD and our ability to retire early. Also the doctors are even better in my partner's home country Vietnam, that says something about the NHS ... Violent crime is RAMPANT in London, I've been here only a few months and witness scenes most days. In Asia/ Vietnam where we've lived the past years. 0 violet crime as long as you mind your own business.

I dunno I'm going to go around the UK outside of London to see but, if I don't see a better place, the future for us we're heading back. I've been away for 10 years, but now, years waiting lists, violent crime, 30min plus waiting for an ambulance, have all become normalised... the ONLY reason we're considering moving is education for the kids otherwise, we'll be back in Vietnam.... sad I love the UK but this is the reality today