When Autonomous Intelligent Goodware will Fight Autonomous Intelligent Malware: A Possible Future of Cyber Defense
Paul Th\'eron, Alexander Kott

TL;DR
This paper explores the future of cyber defense in military systems, proposing autonomous intelligent agents to combat autonomous malware amidst complex, fast-paced cyber threats in warfare.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of autonomous cyber defense using swarms of intelligent agents and reviews current research and technological challenges in this emerging field.
Findings
Overview of autonomous cyber defense (ACyD) concept.
Current state of AICA research and NATO's reference architecture.
Identification of 12 key technological challenges.
Abstract
In the coming years, the future of military combat will include, on one hand, artificial intelligence-optimized complex command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR) and networks and, on the other hand, autonomous intelligent Things fighting autonomous intelligent Things at a fast pace. Under this perspective, enemy forces will seek to disable or disturb our autonomous Things and our complex infrastructures and systems. Autonomy, scale and complexity in our defense systems will trigger new cyber-attack strategies, and autonomous intelligent malware (AIM) will be part of the picture. Should these cyber-attacks succeed while human operators remain unaware or unable to react fast enough due to the speed, scale or complexity of the mission, systems or attacks, missions would fail, our networks and C4ISR would be heavily disrupted, and…
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