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COMPUTEX FORUM 2019: AIoT creates massive opportunities, but security risks abound

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Taipei, Taiwan — Artificial Intelligence and the Internet of Things aren't just buzzwords now. The technologies and infrastructure that have brought both innovations to the plate are seen to cover a wider scope, from powering businesses to doing your laundry every week.

Indeed, AIoT will be an integral part of our world in the years to come. 

In another edition of the much awaited COMPUTEX Taipei series of forums, AIoT was in the spotlight where it's eyed as  a convergence of technologies opening up new possibilities. 

Themed Pervasive Intelligence, COMPUTEX Forum 2019 concluded Wednesday afternoon with the AIoT Session at the Taipei International Conference Center with the final panel of the forum featuring six distinguished speakers from the global industry discussing the latest developments in artificial intelligence (AI) and the Internet of Things (IoT).

Experts discussed how combining AI and IoT is and has, created massive opportunities, but acknowledge security problems as well among its challenges. 

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"COMPUTEX is not just a sourcing platform, not just for procurement, it’s also for building a global technology ecosystem… Today, AI and IoT is very important,” said Walter Yeh, CEO, and president of the Taiwan External Trade Development Council which organized the forum.

Yeh then introduced the first panelist: Joe Jensen, Vice President of the Internet of Things Group and general manager of Retail, Banking, Hospitality and Education at Intel.

COMPUTEX FORUM 2019: AIoT creates massive opportunities, but security risks abound
Jensen

"Over 20 years now I’ve been coming to COMPUTEX and I’ve built some tremendous partnerships and relationships with many of the leaders in this room. Our business has grown tremendously, and I think it’s grown together,” Jensen said during his talk.

“It’s a massive new and large and growing [field],” Jensen said. “If you go step back two or three years ago, the analysts were thinking IoT is all about some little things … billions of things generating data, spewing this data to the cloud and the analytics being done in the cloud.”

The industry now realizes that IoT, especially business and for business insight and value, is really about unleashing computer vision and advanced AI technologies against large, massive sets of real-time data being generated at the edge, according to the Intel exec.

He adds that a huge amount of the insights will be generated live real time at the edge, and that creates vast opportunities as devices, such as sensors, will pool data and process it at the edge, before sending the insights from that data back into industrial processes and the cloud.

He highlighted three vertical markets being transformed by computer vision and AI: retail, smart cities and industrial. These markets have been increasingly employing sensors to create a massive amount of data, which are then used to improve efficiency and safety.

“There are over two million factories in China alone with no data, no analytics and really no computational infrastructure whatsoever,” Jensen said. “Think about the opportunity to go bring analytics and data to improve the efficiency and operation of those two million factories.”

But Jensen was quick to remind everyone that it must be a team effort. 

“We can’t do this alone… It takes the entire ecosystem for us to bring this value to market,” he said, adding that another objective is to help customers scale faster, with market-ready solutions instead of one-off engineer products.

On the other side of the equation, those enormous opportunities can create a security nightmare.

Security Concerns

Mike Gibson, vice president of Threat and Vulnerability Research at Trend Micro, said that the biggest issue that keeps him up at night is IoT security, particularly three challenges: The discovery of new vulnerabilities, being able to establish relationships with vendors to disclose vulnerabilities and then implementing remediation.

COMPUTEX FORUM 2019: AIoT creates massive opportunities, but security risks abound
Gibson

He defined vulnerability as “a way for somebody to leverage or use a system in a way that wasn’t originally intended.”

A growing number of software companies are actively looking for vulnerabilities — for example, through bug bounty programs — and more is also being done as a community, Gibson said, but he added that many vendors, particularly smaller firms, remain reticent to work with security experts to fix problems.

Another principal challenge is that managing security over a massive amount of connected devices is difficult and nearly unmanageable, he said.

Meanwhile, some industries, particularly manufacturing and medical, are particularly vulnerable because they often have to balance downtime of critical equipment caused by maintenance, including security updates, with productivity and efficiency, he added.

Gibson also highlighted the real-world impact of IoT security, including the rising threats of botnets, destructive malware and ransomware, saying that luckily, for the moment, these challenges are manageable.

COMPUTEX FORUM 2019: AIoT creates massive opportunities, but security risks abound

Technologies like AI could provide bad actors with a tool to further exploit and profit from vulnerabilities, he added.

“I think we’re going to see some interesting attacks,” Gibson said, but added: “I don’t think, at this point, the bad guys have really figured out how to monetize exploitation of connected devices.”

He issued recommendations for manufacturers, such as leveraging the free energy of the security research community and ensuring that products are updated while recommending that consumers do their due diligence. (computexdaily)

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