The Cyber Immune System: Harnessing Adversarial Forces for Security Resilience
Krti Tallam

TL;DR
This paper proposes a paradigm shift in cybersecurity, viewing adversarial forces as vital for revealing vulnerabilities and strengthening system resilience through continuous adaptation and stress-testing.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of the 'Cyber Immune System,' emphasizing adversarial engagement as a means to enhance security resilience, inspired by biological systems and environmental epidemiology.
Findings
Adversarial forces expose hidden vulnerabilities in systems.
Engagement with threats drives defensive innovation.
Case study of DOGE breach illustrates adaptive responses.
Abstract
Both parasites in biological systems and adversarial forces in cybersecurity are often perceived as threats: disruptive elements that must be eliminated. However, these entities play a critical role in revealing systemic weaknesses, driving adaptation, and ultimately strengthening resilience. This paper draws from environmental epidemiology and cybersecurity to reframe parasites and cyber exploiters as essential stress-testers of complex systems, exposing hidden vulnerabilities and pushing defensive innovations forward. By examining how biological and digital systems evolve in response to persistent threats, we highlight the necessity of adversarial engagement in fortifying security frameworks. The recent breach of the DOGE website serves as a timely case study, illustrating how adversarial forces, whether biological or digital, compel systems to reassess and reinforce their defenses.
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Taxonomy
TopicsArtificial Immune Systems Applications
