Publications tagged with Cybersecurity
Published:
Publications tagged with "Cybersecurity"
- Marulli, F., Campanile, L., Ragucci, G., Carbone, S., & Bifulco, M. (2025). Data Generation and Cybersecurity: A Major Opportunity or the Next Nightmare? [Conference paper]. Proceedings of the 2025 IEEE International Conference on Cyber Security and Resilience, CSR 2025, 969–974. https://doi.org/10.1109/CSR64739.2025.11130069
Abstract
In recent years, the proliferation of synthetic data generation techniques-driven by advances in artificial intelli-gence-has opened new possibilities across a wide range of fields, from healthcare to autonomous systems, by addressing critical data scarcity issues. However, this technological progress also brings with it a growing concern: the dual-use nature of synthetic data. While it offers powerful tools for innovation, it simultaneously introduces significant risks related to information disorder and cybersecurity. As AI systems become increasingly capable of producing highly realistic yet entirely fabricated content, the boundaries between authentic and artificial information blur, making it more difficult to detect manipulation, protect digital infrastructures, and maintain public trust. This work undertakes a preliminary exploration of the evolving nexus between Generative AI, Information Disorder, and Cybersecurity: it aims to investigate the complex interplay among these three and to map their dynamic interactions and reciprocal influences, highlighting both the potential benefits and the looming challenges posed by this evolving landscape. Moreover, it seeks to propose a conceptual framework for assessing these interdependencies through a set of indicative metrics, offering a foundation for future empirical evaluation and strategic response. © 2025 IEEE. - Bobbio, A., Campanile, L., Gribaudo, M., Iacono, M., Marulli, F., & Mastroianni, M. (2023). A cyber warfare perspective on risks related to health IoT devices and contact tracing [Article]. Neural Computing and Applications, 35(19), 13823–13837. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00521-021-06720-1
Abstract
The wide use of IT resources to assess and manage the recent COVID-19 pandemic allows to increase the effectiveness of the countermeasures and the pervasiveness of monitoring and prevention. Unfortunately, the literature reports that IoT devices, a widely adopted technology for these applications, are characterized by security vulnerabilities that are difficult to manage at the state level. Comparable problems exist for related technologies that leverage smartphones, such as contact tracing applications, and non-medical health monitoring devices. In analogous situations, these vulnerabilities may be exploited in the cyber domain to overload the crisis management systems with false alarms and to interfere with the interests of target countries, with consequences on their economy and their political equilibria. In this paper we analyze the potential threat to an example subsystem to show how these influences may impact it and evaluate a possible consequence. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag London Ltd., part of Springer Nature.