Book Image

10 Machine Learning Blueprints You Should Know for Cybersecurity

By : Rajvardhan Oak
4 (1)
Book Image

10 Machine Learning Blueprints You Should Know for Cybersecurity

4 (1)
By: Rajvardhan Oak

Overview of this book

Machine learning in security is harder than other domains because of the changing nature and abilities of adversaries, high stakes, and a lack of ground-truth data. This book will prepare machine learning practitioners to effectively handle tasks in the challenging yet exciting cybersecurity space. The book begins by helping you understand how advanced ML algorithms work and shows you practical examples of how they can be applied to security-specific problems with Python – by using open source datasets or instructing you to create your own. In one exercise, you’ll also use GPT 3.5, the secret sauce behind ChatGPT, to generate an artificial dataset of fabricated news. Later, you’ll find out how to apply the expert knowledge and human-in-the-loop decision-making that is necessary in the cybersecurity space. This book is designed to address the lack of proper resources available for individuals interested in transitioning into a data scientist role in cybersecurity. It concludes with case studies, interview questions, and blueprints for four projects that you can use to enhance your portfolio. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to apply machine learning algorithms to detect malware, fake news, deep fakes, and more, along with implementing privacy-preserving machine learning techniques such as differentially private ML.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

All about deepfakes

The word deepfake is a combination of two words – deep learning and fake. Put simply, deepfakes are fake media created using deep learning technology. In the past decade, there have been significant advances in machine learning and generative models – models that create content instead of merely classifying it. These models (such as Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs)) can synthesize images that look real – even of human faces!

Deepfake technology is readily accessible to attackers and malicious actors today. It requires no sophistication or technical skills. As an experiment, head over to the website thispersondoesnotexist.com. This website allows you to generate images of people – people who have never existed!

For example, the people in the following figure are not real. They are deepfakes that have been generated by thispersondoesnotexist.com, and it only took a few seconds!

Figure 5.1 – Deepfakes generated from a website

Figure 5.1 –...