Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Governance & Risk Management
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Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development
University of Texas CISO George Finney on Zero Trust Challenges and His New Book
Enterprises need to mature their zero trust models to recognize how trust is inherently built into artificial intelligence and how to proactively identify vulnerabilities. George Finney, CISO at University of Texas Systems, says security teams need to be trained to spot implicit trust across systems.
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“I think those maturity models are great at helping identify where the trust relationships are in digital systems. It is hard enough for folks to change that mindset – to be able to spot implicit trust that we have in different systems – whether it is a basic firewall or AI,” said Finney, who recently published a new book, “Rise of the Machines: A Project Zero Trust Story,” which explores ways to apply the principles of zero trust defenses to emerging AI applications.
AI tools can play an active role in advancing zero trust. For example, scaling software-defined perimeters requires automation that only AI can offer, he said, but security teams must understand the potential risks of AI implementations and ensure defenses based on industry standards and methodologies including the MITRE framework and Open Worldwide Application Security Project.
“That is really what we need help with: educating folks on spotting the trusts,” Finney said.
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Finney also discussed:
- Why zero trust must shift from static models to continuous AI-aware strategies;
- How MITRE Atlas and OWASP tools help identify AI-specific trust issues;
- Ways that AI enables scalable access controls and faster threat response.
Finney, who leads security at the University of Texas Systems, is a bestselling author and co-author of several books on cybersecurity, including “Project Zero Trust” with John Kindervag. He was recognized in 2021 as one of the top 100 CISOs in the world by CISOs Connect and has worked in cybersecurity for more than 20 years.