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    Employees Are Feeding Sensitive Biz Data to ChatGPT, Raising Security Fears

    Robert Lemos at DARKReading just reported on a worrying trend. The title said it all, and the news is that more than 4% of employees have put sensitive corporate data into the large language model, raising concerns that its popularity may result in massive leaks of proprietary information. Yikes.

    I’m giving you a short extract of the story and the link to the whole article is below. 

    “Employees are submitting sensitive business data and privacy-protected information to large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT, raising concerns that artificial intelligence (AI) services could be incorporating the data into their models, and that information could be retrieved at a later date if proper data security isn’t in place for the service.

    In a recent report, data security service Cyberhaven detected and blocked requests to input data into ChatGPT from 4.2% of the 1.6 million workers at its client companies because of the risk of leaking confidential information, client data, source code, or regulated information to the LLM. 

    In one case, an executive cut and pasted the firm’s 2023 strategy document into ChatGPT and asked it to create a PowerPoint deck. In another case, a doctor input his patient’s name and their medical condition and asked ChatGPT to craft a letter to the patient’s insurance company.

    And as more employees use ChatGPT and other AI-based services as productivity tools, the risk will grow, says Howard Ting, CEO of Cyberhaven.

    ‘There was this big migration of data from on-prem to cloud, and the next big shift is going to be the migration of data into these generative apps,” he says. “And how that plays out [remains to be seen] — I think, we’re in pregame; we’re not even in the first inning.'”

    Your employees need to be stepped through new-school security awareness training so that they understand the risks of doing things like this. 


    Request A Quote: Security Awareness Training

    New-school Security Awareness Training is critical to enabling you and your IT staff to connect with users and help them make the right security decisions all of the time. This isn’t a one and done deal, continuous training and simulated phishing are both needed to mobilize users as your last line of defense. Request your quote for KnowBe4’s security awareness training and simulated phishing platform and find out how affordable this is!

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