For 50 years, SAS has worked alongside organizations tackling some of the world’s most complex challenges. While the technology has changed dramatically, one thing remains constant: our customers’ commitment to solving problems, improving outcomes and making a meaningful difference. In the first half of 2026, we shared 26 new customer [...]
The post 50 years of innovation: Customer stories show what’s possible with data and AI appeared first on SAS Blogs.
Security company CrowdStrike has identified five new prompt injection techniques that could leave enterprises at risk. Prompt injections attacks exploit the growing use of AI within organizations . They work by tricking LLMs into accepting instructions that a human operator would recognize as dubious.
The five new types of attack that CrowdStrike has added to its prompt injection taxonomy are:
Trigger-Activated Rule Addition in which an attacker adds a new rule that looks innocuous at first, but can be triggered later to cause strange behavior within the model.
Cognitive Token Suppression,a way to circumvent built-in safety measures by shifting the model’s linguistic choices away from established refusal patterns.
Algorithmic Payload Decomposition,or delivering a message in multiple stages each of which appears innocent but that, when combined, can be assembled into a single command that is more threatening.
Special Token Injection, an attack that can be compared to the embedding of co
The post Export Controls Without Borders: How Foreign-Made Products Trigger U.S. Criminal Liability appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Export Controls Without Borders AI As recent enforcement activity demonstrates, a company does not need an American factory, American employees, or American exports to be subject to American export controls. If a company manufactures items abroad using technology originating from the U.S. and exports those items to U.S.-restricted entities, the company can be subject to American criminal jurisdiction. The risk calculus for multinational companies to avoid U.S. prosecution has changed sharply in recent months. Expanded regulatory provisions and heightened national security priorities have combined to extend U.S. export control enforcement far beyond companies operating on American soil. At the center of this shift is the Foreign-Direct Product Rules (“FDPR”). Once an obscure regulatory provision, the FDPR now extends the scope of U.S. export controls t
At the behest of Chancellor Kamar Samuels, the nation's largest school district won't purchase new technology until completing and approving a new AI policy, the first draft of which was met with opposition and protests.
The post Leadership In The Age Of AI: Human Judgment Is More Valuable, Not Less appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
In the age of AI human judgement is invaluable. Brieane Olson The pace of change in business has never been faster—and nowhere is that more true than in the conversation around AI. New tools launch every day, the pressure to keep up is real, and leaders are trying to figure out where the technology ends and their own judgment begins. But what a lot of people are missing is that with all the AI noise, what’s becoming increasingly valuable isn’t the tech. It’s the human judgment behind it—and developing, hiring for, and protecting that judgment is what leadership in the age of AI actually demands. Recognizing AI’s Limits When our organization attended the D3 Institute at Harvard, the message from global leaders was unambiguous: companies that don’t embrace AI will become obsolete—the future Blockbusters and Kodaks of business history. With that in mind, we built an 18-mont
Organizations know AI is important. They’re investing in it, encouraging teams to use it and looking for ways to scale its value. But many organizations are still struggling to turn that priority into governed, scalable action. Leaders are left scrambling to feel confident about whether AI is being used responsibly, creating a widening gap between what leaders want from AI – innovation, efficiency and competitive [...]
The post How to close the gap between AI adoption and governance appeared first on SAS Blogs.
China's AI control measures could reshape global tech dynamics, limiting international collaboration and complicating compliance for foreign firms.
The post China considers tightening control over domestic AI technology appeared first on Crypto Briefing.