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About 28% of people said they did not use such tools at all.
while 21% said such guidelines were voluntary for their workplace.compared to its global counterparts.
Some 24% revealed having mandatory policies on such use.triggering the maturity of AI as an attack surface and motivating cyber criminals to invest in new tools.About 28% of people said they did not use such tools at all.
exploiting valid accounts has become the path of least resistance for cyber criminals.Andriy Onufriyenko/Getty ImagesEmployees might recognize the potential leak of sensitive data as a top risk.
Also: The best AI chatbotsClose to half (42%) of respondents said they used the tools for research and analysis.
and personally identifiable information.according to research released by Veritas Technologies.
Some 27% of respondents did not believe putting any of this sensitive information into public generative AI tools could yield value to the business.which was the most targeted region in 2021 and 2022.
critical that businesses secure their AI models before threat actors scale their activities.Forty percent cited higher productivity.
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