AI-Powered Surveillance Enhances Enforcement Capabilities

Published on 5.3.25

  The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) in surveillance systems is transforming the way authorities monitor and enforce laws globally. This shift is particularly evident in industries such as oil and gas, where companies like Huawei are leveraging AI-powered solutions to enhance data management and security. Huawei's OceanProtect Backup boasts impressive performance capabilities, detecting ransomware attacks with 99.99% accuracy and safeguarding critical data from its training corpus and vectorial databases. This level of precision is crucial in industries reliant on sensitive information, such as managed service providers (MSPs). The platform's ability to process vast amounts of data in real-time enables authorities to stay ahead of potential threats. AI-powered enforcement is bridging the 'enforcement gap' where minor infractions often go unchecked. Adversa AI, a platform recognized as a 'Hot Company' in the GenAI Application Security category, offers continuous AI Red Teaming capabilities. Huawei's DME data management platform integrates Omni-Dataverse to eliminate data silos across geographically dispersed centers. DataMaster within DME provides AI-based operations and maintenance (O&M) with AI Copilot for all scenarios, offering intelligent Q&A, maintenance assistant, and inspection expert applications. This integration enables efficient data processing and utilization, allowing authorities to recover data from over 100 billion files in seconds. The use of virtualization and container technologies in DCS further increases resource usage by efficiently pooling xPU resources and intelligently planning allocation. As AI continues to advance surveillance capabilities, it is likely that the enforcement gap will continue to narrow, enabling more effective monitoring and assessment of online activities.

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