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Regulators Scramble to Counter AI Rise with Own Tools

ZURICH, June 26 (Reuters) - Banks and financial sector watchdogs must move quickly to adopt new technology to plug system vulnerabilities as AI ​supercharges cybersecurity risks, a top Swiss financial regulator said ‌in an interview.

Here are a few details:

  • Marlene Amstad, president of Swiss market regulator FINMA and chair of an international forum on supervisory technology, spoke ​to Reuters following an initial hackathon to build new ​tools with market supervisors.

  • Models that detect software vulnerabilities have ⁠recently pointed to surging cyberattack and national security risks, with ​AI raising safety and accountability questions in financial institutions.

  • "As hackers move ​faster, banks must adapt by patching vulnerabilities more rapidly," Amstad said in an interview.

  • FINMA helped create a forum within the International Organization of Securities Commissions, ​a standard setter for market regulation, to promote adoption of ​AI by watchdogs that cover around 95% of global financial markets.

  • Around 100 ‌policy ⁠and technology specialists met this week for a hackathon, aiming to jointly build tools for crypto-market supervision, Amstad said.

  • Regulators are looking at possibly embedding safeguards directly into digital asset systems, she added.

  • Experience ​with models such ​as Anthropic's ⁠Mythos has exposed vulnerabilities, revealing AI-related operational risks, Amstad said.

  • The U.S. government this month ordered Anthropic to ​suspend exports of its latest Mythos and Fable ​AI models, ⁠citing national security concerns.

  • Chinese cybersecurity firm 360 Security Technology said this week it has developed a domestic answer to Mythos.

  • "Switzerland must retain access ⁠to ​the most advanced AI models," Amstad ​said, adding that AI will be instrumental to toughen up systems before they are ​deployed.

Reporting by Ariane Luthi and Oliver Hirt; Editing by Joe Bavier

Source: Reuters


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