Gold Eagle Clearinghouse Targets Security Gap, but How Is Unclear
The White House launched Gold Eagle to coordinate vulnerability response in a new AI world, but multiple questions linger over how it's being implemented.
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Artificial intelligence (AI) describes computer systems that perform tasks such as recognizing patterns, making predictions, understanding language, or generating content. In security reporting, the term commonly includes machine-learning models used for detection and analysis, as well as generative AI applications that produce text, code, images, or other outputs.
AI can help analyze security telemetry, prioritize vulnerabilities, and support investigations, but its outputs can be wrong or manipulated. Important attack surfaces include prompt injection that steers an application into unintended actions, sensitive data being exposed through prompts or model outputs, and excessive permissions granted to AI systems that use external tools. Models can also be degraded by poisoned training data or evaded with carefully crafted inputs. Practitioners should protect training and operational data, limit model access and tool permissions, test for adversarial behavior, and require appropriate human validation before high-impact decisions.
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The White House launched Gold Eagle to coordinate vulnerability response in a new AI world, but multiple questions linger over how it's being implemented.
The White House announced Gold Eagle to help accelerate the discovery, prioritization and patching of flaws found by AI
Initiative seeks to prevent duplicate vulnerability scanning and remediation efforts.The Trump administration has launched Gold Eagle, a federal AI cybersecurity clearinghouse that coordinates AI-discovered software vulnerabilities through Carnegie Mellon University's VINCE platform to speed validation, disclosure and remediation while reducing duplicate efforts across government and industry.
The White House said the clearinghouse has already started to receive intelligence on vulnerabilities and prioritize patches. The post White House details ‘Gold Eagle’ clearinghouse for AI cyber threats appeared first on CyberScoop.