NIST, MITRE Partner on $20m AI Centers For Manufacturing and Cybersecurity
NIST and MITRE are collaboratively launching two centers to advance AI security for US manufacturing and critical infrastructure
MITRE develops cybersecurity knowledge bases such as ATT&CK, which practitioners use to map adversary tactics, techniques, and defensive coverage.
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Background for this topic.
MITRE is a U.S. not-for-profit organization whose cybersecurity work includes the ATT&CK knowledge base and the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) program. ATT&CK organizes documented adversary behavior into tactics, such as credential access, and techniques, such as phishing or PowerShell use. CVE assigns standardized identifiers and descriptions to publicly disclosed software vulnerabilities, allowing security teams and tools to refer to the same issue consistently.
Practitioners map threat-intelligence reports, incident evidence, and detection rules to ATT&CK to identify attack behaviors and gaps in monitoring or response coverage. They use CVE identifiers to correlate vulnerability disclosures with affected assets, patches, and other assessment data. An ATT&CK technique describes a behavior, not proof that a particular actor was responsible or that every associated detection is effective. Likewise, a CVE identifier is not a severity score or a guarantee that a system is affected; teams must verify product versions, exposure, exploitability, and available mitigations before prioritizing remediation.
NIST and MITRE are collaboratively launching two centers to advance AI security for US manufacturing and critical infrastructure