ISACs confront AI’s promise and peril for threat intelligence-sharing

Any use of AI for ISAC work must preserve members’ trust, representatives of three critical infrastructure sectors said.
“People have to see the value in the information that’s being shared,” said Denise Anderson, the president and CEO of the Health-ISAC.
Health-ISAC is looking into whether AI can speed up its distribution of threat alerts or its collation of open-source intelligence for daily reports. These current uses of AI for ISAC work involve “taking a lot of the noise out of the work and making it much more efficient,” said Denise Anderson, president and CEO of Health-ISAC.
In addition to leading Health-ISAC, Anderson chairs the National Council of ISACs, and she said the council was considering setting up a cross-sector AI working group to exchange information and best practices about how to responsibly use the technology.
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