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Cloud Security Alliance Addresses Using Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Offensive Security in New Report

Paper explores the unique transformative potential, challenges, and limitations of Large Language Model (LLM)-powered AI in offensive security

Black Hat Conference (Las Vegas) Today, the Cloud Security Alliance (CSA), the world’s leading organization dedicated to defining standards, certifications, and best practices to help ensure a secure cloud computing environment, released Using Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Offensive Security. The report, drafted by the AI Technology and Risk Working Group, explores the transformative potential of Large Language Model (LLM)-powered AI by examining its integration into offensive security. Specifically, the report addresses current challenges and showcases AI’s capabilities across five security phases: reconnaissance, scanning, vulnerability analysis, exploitation, and reporting.

“AI is here to transform offensive security, however, it’s not a silver bullet. Because AI solutions are limited by the scope of their training data and algorithms, it's essential to understand the current state-of-the-art of AI and leverage it as an augmentation tool for human security professionals,” said Adam Lundqvist, a lead author of the paper. “By adopting AI, training teams on potential and risks, and fostering a culture of continuous improvement, organizations can significantly enhance their defensive capabilities and secure a competitive edge in cybersecurity.”

Among the report’s key findings:

  • Security teams face a shortage of skilled professionals, increasingly complex and dynamic environments, and the need to balance automation with manual testing.
  • AI, mainly through LLMs and AI agents, offers significant capabilities in offensive security, including data analysis, code and text generation, planning realistic attack scenarios, reasoning, and tool orchestration. These capabilities can help automate reconnaissance, optimize scanning processes, assess vulnerabilities, generate comprehensive reports, and even autonomously exploit vulnerabilities.
  • Leveraging AI in offensive security enhances scalability, efficiency, speed, discovery of more complex vulnerabilities, and ultimately, the overall security posture.
  • While promising, no single AI solution can revolutionize offensive security today. Ongoing experimentation with AI is needed to find and implement effective solutions. This requires creating an environment that encourages learning and development, where team members can use AI tools and techniques to grow their skills.

As outlined in the report, the utilization of AI in offensive security presents unique opportunities but also limitations. Managing large datasets and ensuring accurate vulnerability detection are significant challenges that can be addressed through technological advancements and best practices. However, limitations such as token window constraints in AI models require careful planning and mitigation today. To overcome these challenges, the report’s authors recommend that organizations incorporate AI to automate tasks and augment human capabilities; maintain human oversight to validate AI outputs, improve quality, and ensure technical advantage; and implement robust governance, risk, and compliance frameworks and controls to ensure safe, secure, and ethical AI use.

“While AI offers significant potential to enhance offensive security capabilities, it’s crucial to acknowledge the difficulties that can arise from its use. Putting appropriate mitigation strategies, such as those covered in this report, in place can help ensure AI's safe and effective integration into security frameworks,” said Kirti Chopra, a lead author of the paper.

Download Using AI for Offensive Security.

About Cloud Security Alliance

The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) is the world’s leading organization dedicated to defining and raising awareness of best practices to help ensure a secure cloud computing environment. CSA harnesses the subject matter expertise of industry practitioners, associations, governments, and its corporate and individual members to offer cloud security-specific research, education, training, certification, events, and products. CSA's activities, knowledge, and extensive network benefit the entire community impacted by cloud — from providers and customers to governments, entrepreneurs, and the assurance industry — and provide a forum through which different parties can work together to create and maintain a trusted cloud ecosystem. For further information, visit us at www.cloudsecurityalliance.org, and follow us on Twitter @cloudsa.

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