Feb. 21, 2024, 3:49 p.m. | Zac Amos

Hacker Noon - cybersecurity hackernoon.com

Deepfake phishing uses AI-generated content to craft more believable phishing attempts — and these attempts rose by 3000% in 2023 alone. To protect against deepfake phishing, organizations should secure account access, train employees, fight AI with AI, impose failsafes, and monitor evolving threats.

Read All

access account account access ai models cybercrime cybersecurity deepfake deepfake phishing deepfakes employees evolving threats generated hackernoon-top-story monitor organizations phishing phishing attempts protect social engineering threats train

SOC 2 Manager, Audit and Certification

@ Deloitte | US and CA Multiple Locations

Security Officer Hospital Laguna Beach

@ Allied Universal | Laguna Beach, CA, United States

Sr. Cloud DevSecOps Engineer

@ Oracle | NOIDA, UTTAR PRADESH, India

Cloud Operations Security Engineer

@ Elekta | Crawley - Cornerstone

Cybersecurity – Senior Information System Security Manager (ISSM)

@ Boeing | USA - Seal Beach, CA

Engineering -- Tech Risk -- Security Architecture -- VP -- Dallas

@ Goldman Sachs | Dallas, Texas, United States