United States:
NCSC Releases 2018 Foreign Economic Espionage In Cyberspace Report
25 October 2018
by
Jeremy S. Close
,
Meredith Collier
,
David R. Coogan
,
Jeffrey Scott Connell
,
Jennifer Everett
,
Nicolas Hidalgo
,
Richard Johnson
,
Laura Lim
,
Daniel McLoon
,
Mary Alexander Myers
,
Mauricio Paez
,
Nicole Perry
,
Aaron Tso
and
Anand Varadarajan
Jones Day
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.
On July 26, the National Counterintelligence and Security Center
("NCSC") released its 2018 Foreign Economic Espionage in
Cyberspace report, which highlighted current threats and
trends in foreign intelligence efforts to steal U.S. intellectual
property, trade secrets, and proprietary information through
cyberspace. The report noted that next-generation technology, such
as artificial intelligence, introduces new vulnerabilities to U.S.
networks. It also identified the industries and technologies that
foreign threat actors are most likely to target.
POPULAR ARTICLES ON: Technology from United States
AI In Retail And Consumer Products: Managing The Risks
Arnold & Porter
Artificial intelligence brings new opportunities and efficiencies to how companies conduct business, often working behind the scenes to transform day-to-day operations and how we live our daily lives.
Robot Rights: Can AI Achieve Personhood? (Video)
Gamma Law
As AI systems become increasingly sophisticated and exhibit cognition and creativity, a critical question arises: How should generative platforms be categorized from a legal standpoint?