The technology world was on fire about the latest artificial intelligence demonstration by OpenAI in the waning months of 2022, ChatGPT. It is truly a remarkable achievement; an artificial intelligence (AI) that can converse and be asked to do everything, from writing essays, to coding of computer programs.
As a computer security expert, I immediately did what came naturally to people like me; I tried to hack it. Could I get it to do something bad, something malicious? Could this be abused by criminals or spies to enable new types of cybercrime?
The answer, of course, like most tools, is yes. Someone with ill intent can abuse these miraculous scientific achievements to do things that could likely cause harm. The surprising part, however, is that the danger lies in the social arena, not the technical one.
While ChatGPT can be tricked into writing malicious computer code; that is not very scary. Computer code can be analysed by computer security products in milliseconds and be deemed malicious or safe with a high degree of certainty. Technology can always counteract technology. The problems surface when what we are trying to detect is not computer code, but rather words and meaning that will be interpreted by humans, not machines.
Two factors make this dangerous. The first is that up until now, it was not practical to have a computer create tempting lures for tricking victims to interact. The technology is now, not only available, but also so easily accessible as to be cheap, or even free. The second is that the primary way users keep themselves safe today is by noticing mistakes made by attackers in their grammar and spelling to detect that an email or communication may be from an intruder.
If we take away the last remaining sign that someone without a strong command of the language created a malicious email or chat message carelessly, how will we defend ourselves?
In my eyes, this signals the end of most computer users’ ability to discern real mail from fake. Today these tools only work well for English language text, but that is a simple training issue. The ability to write fluently in any language in the world (including computer-programming languages) is here. We must rethink our approaches to user education and implement technical measures to prevent these messages from ever making it into their inboxes.
The good news is that computers are quite good at detecting and potentially blocking most of this content. Ultimately, a spam campaign always has some sort of call to action, they may want you to phone them, reply, click a link or open an attachment. These are impossible to remove and can aid in detection. We can also train AI models to detect when ChatGPT has generated text and add a warning banner, or perhaps block the message.
The problematic situations are when we fail to block them and they end up in someone’s inbox. It is a reasonably small percentage, but it is not zero, and therefore we must prepare a defence. Having defensive layers is essential and with humans’ having reduced ability to spot a scam it is even more important that users are connecting through firewalls and web protection that can detect and block threats.
User training will need to shift away from the ‘watch for spelling mistakes’ type of messaging, and more into risk-based approaches to verification of whom you’re talking to. If asked to do something financially, with a password, or with sensitive data, pick up the phone and confirm before proceeding.
As machine intelligence continues to advance, the work of separating fact from fiction will continue to get more and more difficult. We will need to be sure we build systems that are flexible enough to combat these messages, but also educate our staff on their need to take additional steps when receiving sensitive requests over email.
© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd. | All Rights Reserved.