Are
automated “computer hackers” better than human hackers? DARPA is
answering this question
in positive and looking to prove its point with the help of its Cyber
Grand Challenge. The contest finale will feature seven powerful computer
fighting against each other. The winner of the contest will challenge
human hackers at the annual DEF CON hacking
conference.
t
looks like the Pentagon thinks that human hackers are too slow at
locating the security loopholes and fixing them. To make amends, DARPA
is holding
the Cyber Grand Challenge just before the annual DEF CON hacking conference that’ll be held next week in Las Vegas.
DARPA
is looking to prove that its computers are “the perfect hackers”. To do
the same,
the winning team will compete against the human hackers at DEF CON’s
annual capture-the-flag event. It will also grab a $2 million prize
money.
To
compete in this challenge’s final, seven teams have been selected.
These entries from the security industry and research
fields will be pitting against the computers provided by DARPA. These
computers will be running DARPA’s special software suite developed for
this event.
These
seven teams were selected from the initial phase of a contest held last
summer. They are now given $750,000 and a powerful computer with 16TB
memory and 1,000 processor cores.
For
scoring
points and winning the contest, the participant’s computer must find
and trigger bugs in the software of opponent team. They’ll need to take
security cautions and defend their own system, obviously.
The
DARPA program manager, Mike Walker, who is leading this project, says
that DARPA aims to make
an autonomous system that can detect the security flaws in a software
on its own and patch the same without any crash event. He claims that
such efforts are a way to make this world a safer place.
The security flaws in software go unnoticed for around 312 days on an average, according to Walker.
He adds that after some flaw is noticed by security experts, it takes some time to understand it and develop a fix.
DARPA’s
Cyber Grand Challenge aims to fasten this cycle by employing bot
hackers that can find a problem on their own within minutes, or seconds.
“If technology is democratized, then we don’t believe
that nefarious misuse will be feasible, because the bugs that will be found will already have been patched,” Walker said.
Do you agree with DARPA’s views? Are computer hackers more efficient that human hackers? Share your views in the comments below.
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