Smart Industry Update - May 2nd, 2024
 
 
Turning AI abuse back on cyberattackers
Smart Industry Update | View online
 
May 2, 2024
Featured Story
Like any breakthrough, AI can be twisted for illegitimate purposes, but manufacturing IT and OT people can also turn the technology against cyber intruders. Here's how.
Today's Top Stories
Manufacturing cloud ERP provider names software veteran to succeed interim chief exec, who will continue to serve as executive chairman of Rootstock’s board of directors.
Outdated legacy maintenance and inspection processes that these frontline workers must deal with are hurting companies.
In this e-handbook, Smart Industry delves into such topics as: MQTT and why it’s becoming a popular protocol for IIoT data; why IoT device manufacturers need to prioritize cyber resilience; IIoT’s game-changing role in modern asset management; IIoT’s critical role in Industry 4.0 and digital transformation; the importance of air gapping OT assets; ...
Editor's Picks
These attacks not only threaten the security of sensitive information but also disrupt critical industrial operations, leading to significant financial losses and the damaging of trust among consumers and partners.
From a CIO and self-described “technologist” comes real use cases for this breakthrough technology with many industrial applications like tailoring individualized customer portals, purchasing augmentation, and simplified plant technical documentation.
Cyber threats have evolved into a formidable adversary, targeting the factory floor with relentless precision.
Sponsored
Things are looking up with the cloud. Not literally, of course, but figuratively, as cloud capabilities increasingly become more affordable, more secure, and more widely adopted in the manufacturing space. As such, the successes resulting from smart cloud applications—like those featured within this report—grow more promising every day....
In this episode of Great Question, Michael Bearman of Vecna explores how to solve robot issues remotely without local intervention from humans.
Informal email poll of visitors to Smart Industry mirrors a February release of results from wider research that showed concern among over 1,000 security professionals about the extreme vulnerability of industrial operational technology to intrusion.
Rewatch Kimberly Cornwell of Siemens and Tim Gaus of Deloitte helping Smart Industry figure out how technology people in OT and IT can bust barriers—by transcending job titles, breaking silos, and merging their missions—toward the goal of success for their manufacturing companies’ digital transformation efforts.