CISA and Singapore CSA publish joint guidance on securing AI systems in enterprise environments — covering model access controls, data pipeline security, and adversarial mitigations. APAC security teams should audit AI infrastructure against this baseline.
The United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and Singapore's Cyber Security Agency (CSA) have jointly published guidance on securing AI systems deployed in enterprise environments. The guidance covers: securing model access and API endpoints, protecting training data pipelines from poisoning attacks, detecting and mitigating adversarial inputs, and monitoring AI system behaviour for anomalies that may indicate compromise.
The publication of joint US-Singapore guidance reflects the growing recognition that AI systems introduce novel attack surfaces that traditional cybersecurity frameworks do not adequately address. For APAC enterprises deploying LLMs, AI-powered automation, and ML models in production, the guidance provides a practical baseline for AI-specific security controls. APAC security teams should review the joint guidance against their existing AI infrastructure and identify gaps in model access governance, data pipeline security, and adversarial resilience — particularly for AI systems handling sensitive customer or financial data.
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