Open XDR. PHOTO: Cybercrime Magazine.

Fighting AI with AI: Tools for the Twenty-First Century

AI is the most effective tool in our arsenal to identify and regulate AI-generated content.

Aimei Wei, Chief Technical Officer, Stellar Cyber

San Jose, Calif. – Sep. 5, 2024

In a recent conversation with a major educational institution’s CIO, the following circumstance arose: a university administrator was hiring for a position; of over 300 resumes that he received, 95 percent of them looked so similar that they could have come from the same person. And in a way, they did.

With the proliferation of AI-powered tools in the consumer market, it becomes both more difficult and more important to distinguish between content created by artificial intelligence and traditional content. As more tasks become automated, AI is being deployed not only to streamline creative processes, but also to devise new ways of infiltrating networks, mining data, and impersonating users.

The most effective tool in our arsenal when it comes to identifying and regulating AI-generated content is, in fact, AI itself.

 The idea of AI regulating AI is grounded in an already pervasive logic surrounding AI-driven detection tools. AI has proven to be an effective tool when it comes to sorting through overwhelming amounts of data — why not use the most advanced tool in our arsenal to monitor, regulate, and engage with the constantly evolving frontier of artificial intelligence?



Cybersecurity is a classic industry example of AI-driven tools playing a significant role in regulating the behavior of other AI-generated actors. Cyberattacks succeed by evolving and adapting to increased security measures – an ability to overwhelm a security system on multiple fronts. Those capabilities are enhanced many times over by AI, rendering them much more effective, and therefore, much more of a threat to the security of organizations and individuals alike.

Cyberattacks can compromise the data of all of an organization’s users and clients; manually regulating disguised social attacks would be a Sisyphean task.

All it takes is one successful attack to severely compromise an entire organization. With such stakes, it is imperative that an organization find solutions and invest in platforms that can meet the level of current threats with the same level — or greater — of sophistication. Due to the nature of automated attacks, the most efficient cybersecurity system is also the most effective one.

– Aimei Wei founded Stellar Cyber, Inc. and serves as the company’s CTO. Stellar Cyber makes the most open, automation-driven security operations platform powered by Open XDR. Aimei has more than 20 years’ experience building successful products and leading teams in data networking and telecommunications. She has extensive experience working for early-stage startups (including Nuera, SS8 Networks and Kineto Wireless) and well-established companies like Nortel, Ciena and Cisco. Prior to founding Stellar Cyber, she was actively developing Software Defined Networks solutions at Cisco. Aimei enjoys building a product from its initial design to its final launch. She has an M.S. in Computer Science from the Queen’s University in Kingston, Canada and an Undergraduate degree in Computer Science from the Tsinghua University of China.


About Stellar Cyber

Stellar Cyber’s Open XDR Platform delivers comprehensive, unified security without complexity, empowering lean security teams of any skill level to secure their environments successfully. With Stellar Cyber, organizations reduce risk with early and precise identification and remediation of threats while slashing costs, retaining investments in existing tools, and improving analyst productivity, delivering an 8X improvement in MTTD and a 20X improvement in MTTR. The company is based in Silicon Valley. For more information, visit https://stellarcyber.ai.