Retroactive Security
Classic security uses access control, and, essentially, that does not work. Current systems are designed to say “no” and otherwise limit access, while another reason is code bugs. Real-world security currently is retroactive, an example being the financial system, in which mistakes or breaks can be undone after they occur. Typical access controls consist of both physical and principal boundaries, isolation of an item or information, control of access into this isolation, and policies stating who can have access.
接下来观看
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Session: Compute & Trust (Systems)
- Ashish Panwar,
- Aditya Desai,
- Abhilash Jindal
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Multimodal & Embodied Intelligence (Pt 1), Panel on Multimodal AI: Progress, Pitfalls, Possibilities
- Madhava Krishna,
- Sriram Ganapathy,
- Somak Aditya
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Session on Compute & Trust (Security)
- Krishna Pillutla,
- Danish Pruthi
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Session on Reasoning
- Hongxiang Fan,
- Nagarajan Natarajan
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Session on Retrieval
- Lokesh Nagalapatti,
- Soumen Chakrabarti
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