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Traditional security treats tools like mechanical clocks that we must manually "rewire" to fix; the future treats them as goal-directed agents on a spectrum of intelligence. Imagine a system that doesn't just crash when attacked but "wants" to be healthy—a network that regrows its own security posture like a salamander regrows a limb.
By John MenerickTraditional security treats tools like mechanical clocks that we must manually "rewire" to fix; the future treats them as goal-directed agents on a spectrum of intelligence. Imagine a system that doesn't just crash when attacked but "wants" to be healthy—a network that regrows its own security posture like a salamander regrows a limb.