Do you personally use AI in your work or private life?

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kumartk
Posts: 365
Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 5:55 am

Do you personally use AI in your work or private life?

Post by kumartk »

Yes, I use AI both at work and in my private life. The use varies in the way and extent. At work, rather cautiously, so far relatively little only within the technologies and tools that we use within cybersecurity, in my private life more and for various purposes.

The reason for the difference in use is of course the possible impacts on the organization, restrictions related to data protection, employer copyrights and more. The results I get from using AI vary, it depends a lot on the suitability of the application, the model used or the chosen method of questioning. In any case, I am a fan of AI, it is something that can help us as humanity a lot.

It is said that when it comes to cybersecurity, the human factor is often the ghana phone number data biggest risk. Is that really the case?
In my opinion, yes, definitely. There are many reasons. For example, a person often makes mistakes (whether intentionally or unintentionally) , has trouble responding to the same situations in the same, unified way, allows himself to be manipulated, is trusting, is subject to emotions, also has a tendency to look for shortcuts, ignore rules, ignore facts, neglect even the most basic safety rules, simplify his life, etc.

In short, everything that makes us human beings, people, is or tends to be our disadvantage in the cyber world, in the world of fraud and attacks. Hackers are clever at exploiting this.

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Do you have any advice for an ordinary person who wants to protect their personal data? What should they do to do so?
I would place great emphasis on carefully considering what data, especially personal data, photos, contacts and other personal information, you share where and with whom. Do not tell strangers anything over the phone, do not confirm, do not forward anything. If you do share something, then only to the extent absolutely necessary or after verifying that you are communicating with the right person.

There is no such thing as irrelevant data. There is only data whose time has not yet come, but will one day. Often, an attacker will use a stolen identity (username/password/reference/link) only as a springboard to enter an organization or attack other people, and the indirect damage you incur can be much worse than the direct damage.

Generally, the basis is caution, healthy distrust, if you will. To be a little on guard and aware of what is happening around. To ask, is this normal, what happened to me? Is this common, is this possible?

Is it likely that I inherited several million from a stranger three times a week, or that someone wants to buy a trivial item from me on an advertising portal and send a courier all the way from England to get it? Or that someone will offer me a super advantageous investment in broken Czech backed by a famous personality?

Is it normal and common for banks to call clients when their accounts are attacked and offer to withdraw money and then deposit it into a Bitcoin ATM as a means of rescue? I don't think so.

Basic tools and computer hygiene, such as using updated software, hardware (firmware upgrades), the latest versions of applications, operating systems, web browsers, antivirus/antimalware systems, and data backups (including on mobile devices), can help in part. But the key role in all of this is played by humans.
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