Passwords are passé: GenAI demands new methods of digital security

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Passwords might seem like a relatively recent, internet-age phenomenon, but the first digital password dates all the way back to 1961. Other significant events that year: Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first person to orbit the earth, construction began on the Berlin Wall in East Germany, and the Beatles played their very first show at the Cavern Club in Liverpool. The world has come a long way since 1961. And yet, after more than half a century of technological and societal progress, the humble password remains our go-to, frontline defense against cybercriminals.

Passwords have never offered very reliable protection from family, nosy colleagues, or – least of all – ambitious fraudsters. But the advent of readily available, easily useable artificial intelligence (AI) tools has made the digital password as we know it all but obsolete. Though it was created to accelerate creativity and innovation, generative AI also allows bad actors to circumvent password-based security, social engineering their way (via deepfake videos, voice clones, and incredibly personalized scams) into our digital banking accounts.

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