CICC, tinututukan ang artificial intelligence para sa digital forensics ng bansa

  • last month
CICC, tinututukan ang artificial intelligence para sa digital forensics ng bansa

For more news, visit:
►https://www.ptvnews.ph/

Subscribe to our DailyMotion Channel:
►http://www.dailymotion.com/peoples-television-incorporated

Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
►http://www.youtube.com/ptvphilippines

Like our Facebook pages:
►PTV: http://facebook.com/PTVph
►Rise and Shine Pilipinas: https://www.facebook.com/riseandshinepilipinas

Follow us on Twitter:
►http://twitter.com/PTVph

Follow us on Instagram:
►https://www.instagram.com/ptvph

Watch our livestream on:
►http://ptvnews.ph/livestream/
►https://www.dailymotion.com/PTVPhilippines

Watch our News Programs, every Mondays to Fridays

Rise and Shine Pilipinas - 6:00 - 8:00 am
Bagong Pilipinas Ngayon - 12:00 - 1:00 pm
Sentro Balita - 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Ulat Bayan - 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
PTV News Tonight - 9:30 pm - 10:30 pm

Saturday & Sunday:
►Ulat Bayan Weekend - 6:15 pm - 7:00 pm

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00Research and Development Projects of the CICC regarding Artificial Intelligence.
00:06We will discuss this with Assistant Secretary Mary Rose Magsaysay,
00:11Deputy Executive Director of Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center.
00:17Assec Magsaysay, good afternoon to you.
00:21Good afternoon to you, Nina.
00:24To all the viewers, is it still morning?
00:28It's afternoon already.
00:29Yes, did you have lunch already, Assec?
00:31It's afternoon already, okay.
00:32Did you have lunch already?
00:36Not yet.
00:39We are the same. Let's talk about work first.
00:41Because now, you are focusing on artificial intelligence for digital forensics and intelligence gathering.
00:52First, what is digital forensics?
00:54Can you elaborate on this, Assec, and your specific contributions of the CICC
01:00in your participation in the Scientific Working Group on Digital Evidence, a U.S.-based organization?
01:10Okay.
01:11So, we know that there are a lot of cybercrimes.
01:15How can we solve a cybercrime?
01:19We will collect the evidence, digital evidences, that prove that a cybercrime happened.
01:29What are these?
01:30Screenshots, emails, calls on the phone, logs on the computer and phone that show that
01:38there are things happening at certain times of the day and certain hours of the night.
01:45We collect all of these things and this forms what you call a group of digital evidences.
01:56Now, digital evidences are very important.
02:00We have a complaint center, Dial 1326.
02:08When you call there, it is not enough for you to just record what is happening.
02:14They will ask you for proof that the crime happened.
02:21A screenshot of you stealing money, you have a debt, you did not pay, someone paid you for an item.
02:29Your conversations can be screenshotted.
02:34That is a digital evidence.
02:36A picture of someone dying, stealing, or running around stealing.
02:41A person going in and out of a house, being caught by cameras.
02:44That is a digital evidence.
02:46I am in an agency.
02:49If our boss wants to know how we use our emails because the government owns the computer and emails,
02:59they can open it and when they get the contents, they call it digital evidences.
03:05How do they get this?
03:06The digital evidences are mirrored or extracted by the CICC.
03:13They give it to us and we prove it to be true.
03:18If it is true, we collect it and you can use it to have a strong case against the person who committed the crime.
03:29That is a digital evidence.
03:31Now, the extraction of digital evidences that we get from different places,
03:39from places where our data is hidden like your SIM card,
03:42that is where the data is saved.
03:44SD card, thumb drives, data facilities around the world, cloud, your computer, RAM.
03:54A lot of things are obtained by those who investigate digital evidences.
04:00Now, it is important that you give it to the right agency because if the person holding this evidence has no mandate to hold it,
04:11the chain of custody will be broken.
04:15There is someone holding it who is not supposed to hold it.
04:18Therefore, the digital evidence will be thrown away.
04:20Now, what is the path of AI in investigating digital evidences?
04:30Because there are a lot of cybercrimes now, tens of thousands happening in a day,
04:36the CICC has decided that instead of buying platforms and programs to investigate if this is true or not,
04:50especially the gossip, right?
04:52The men who are mad at the woman will send a picture of their girlfriend who is drunk.
04:57Okay, that is digital evidence against that person who has done that to you.
05:04That is what we call crimes against women.
05:11When you are a child, crimes against women and children, and the gossip cases, all of those,
05:18we need to have R&D so that we will not keep subscribing to expensive platforms
05:26that are made in other countries.
05:28We are the ones who developed this in the Philippines.
05:34That is why we are doing R&D so that we can save money and we can do this faster.
05:41That is why we have R&D in the CICC because if we do not buy enough, the government's money will be wasted.
05:50So that is the CICC.
05:52We are the ones who extract and analyze the digital evidences.
05:58We are the ones who bring it to the DOJ.
06:01We compile it and submit it.
06:04Then when there is a hearing, we also verify if the evidence is true or not.
06:15Asik, what are the challenges that the CICC faces in integrating AI technology in digital forensics,
06:28especially in its transparency and bias algorithms?
06:32How do you address this?
06:35Okay.
06:36That is why we are doing R&D because what we notice is that when we buy platforms in other countries
06:43to extract evidences, the people who made this are not Filipinos.
06:53Therefore, their ethical standards are definitely different from ours.
06:58They have biases.
07:00For example, if a child or a person is naked, it is not picked up by AI.
07:10What we do is white.
07:12If we are naked and we have color, we are brown, right?
07:16So it is difficult.
07:17These are the challenges that we see in the platforms that we buy.
07:23It does not fit with the digital evidences that we produce here in the Philippines.
07:32So that's one challenge.
07:34Definitely, the financial challenge has forced us to go R&D, to produce our own solutions.
07:41There are a lot of people who are studying to be in AI, to program AI platforms.
07:49That's what's good about the Philippines.
07:50It is not a challenge.
07:52Filipinos really know that the world is moving towards that because it is accelerating.
07:58AI studies something that is like a person.
08:07A program gives traits of a person so that when it looks at something,
08:15the eyes and the experience of a person are there.
08:20So it is right.
08:22It is more ethical, more localized.
08:26So it is okay for a lot of people to study into AI.
08:30In fact, Yusek Batapan talked about it yesterday.
08:34They are really going to the provinces to push people to study how to program into AI
08:40because we Filipinos are the source of manpower for technologies all over the world.
08:49So because we are already there, the Philippines is helping through the CICC.
08:56We have a representation in SWIG DE, Scientific Working Group on Digital Evidence.
09:00This is what is being done by the standards assumed by NIST in total for digital evidences.
09:10Its chairman is a Filipino from CICC, Mr. Lagui.
09:16In terms of other challenges, I think the other challenges would be that we don't have enough time
09:24to really lay the importance for us to be the lead in terms of AI in the whole Philippines.
09:34Internationally, we have already achieved that.
09:37We nominated the ADOC Committee on Cybercrime as early as January last year
09:44when they still did not understand what AI could do to things, including cybercrime.
09:49The Philippines pushed the agenda that our new treaty needs to look at
09:55the things that could affect the cybercrimes of the whole world involving AI.
10:01Because if we are using this for good, looking for crimes, assessing digital evidences,
10:08we are also being used against by cybercriminals.
10:12So, we need to prioritize, speed up, and increase the number of people who are doing good instead of wrong.
10:19Okay, Asek, Rose, one of your projects is to provide portable cybersecurity solutions
10:28for organizations that have limited technical resources.
10:33Please explain to us, Asek, what is this Network Forensics in AI Box Project?
10:42Okay.
10:43So, our Network Forensics in an AI Box,
10:47because we saw that the United States is supporting us,
10:53they are teaching us, they are showing us how to solve cybercrime.
10:57And you will see that there is only one person who has all the tools for digital forensics.
11:03It is only in one place, in one box.
11:06So, the police cars, when they put the phone number of the thief,
11:12they will find you right away, you will geolocate right away.
11:15That is actually AI who is doing that.
11:19Then, they are just looking for the person.
11:22So, all these things, even to find out the personality that might be involved in the crime
11:29can be done in one single dashboard, in a car, being used by one person.
11:36So, it is not just an organization.
11:38We are helping to increase this and make it cheaper.
11:42That is why we are developing it with BINILD.
11:45DOST will fund this.
11:48The funding will be given to BINILD.
11:50They are doing the study.
11:53Then, CICC will benefit from that study.
11:56So, after the research and development funded by DOST to BINILD,
12:02the results, the information, and the platform that can be done,
12:08actually, we are halfway there.
12:10CICC has already created its world's first digital forensics manual powered by AI.
12:19So, we used GPT on that.
12:22There are other initiatives that we are doing that I'm not discussing,
12:27but what's good about it, as I said, is that the Filipinos are good at it.
12:31The techs in CICC are good at it.
12:34We are front and center of all this creation of AI.
12:40From the standards with the SWIG DE, headed by a Filipino,
12:46the Chairman of AI for Digital Forensics in SWIG DE,
12:50we joined the ISO because there are still no standards there.
12:55So, we will include the standards on digital forensics to be ethical.
13:02We will know if the evidence we get is really true
13:07and if it was done in the right way or in the wrong way.
13:12We will know who is doing it.
13:16And also, all of these things comes up,
13:21the end product is that we have the ability in a box.
13:27It's like all of our police needs are there.
13:30Eventually, we don't need to go to the lab anymore.
13:33We will bring everything there.
13:34That's the process for everything.
13:35So, we're on that stage now to help the government solve cyber crimes.
13:42Thank you very much for your time.
13:45Assistant Secretary Mary Rose Magsaysay,
13:48Deputy Executive Director of Cyber Crime Investigation and Coordinating Center.

Recommended