Home Prototypes CISA, Partners Release Guidance on AI in Critical Systems Prototypes CISA, Partners Release Guidance on AI in Critical Systems By styloux - December 12, 2025 24 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp The document emphasizes governance, risk assessment and safety principles to protect operational technology as AI adoption grows. Understanding security concerns during development is one recommendation. RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR Prototypes How the AI-driven data center boom is leading to skyrocketing energy bills for many Americans Prototypes The $720 Billion Capex Trap: 2 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Hyperscalers Spending on Growth While the Rest Spend on Maintenance Prototypes Anthropic created a test marketplace for agent-on-agent commerce Prototypes Prediction: Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks Will Lead the Nasdaq to New Highs. Here Are the 3 Best to Buy Now. Prototypes Maine’s governor vetoes data center moratorium Prototypes The Best Artificial Intelligence (AI) Growth Stock on the Nasdaq That Morningstar Says Is Still Undervalued LEAVE A REPLY Cancel reply Please enter your comment! Please enter your name here You have entered an incorrect email address! Please enter your email address here Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. - Advertisement -APLICATIONS Prototypes ChatGPT launched three years ago today styloux - November 30, 2025 0 It’s no hyperbole to suggest that ChatGPT subsequently transformed the worlds of business and tech. Montreux Jazz Festival’s 60th anniversary poster is like nothing we’ve seen... November 11, 2025 Big discounts on Samsung Galaxy Watches: Premium smart wearables for less December 20, 2025 The Watchmaking Journey of Kari Voutilainen April 28, 2022 HOT NEWS Prototypes What church leaders get wrong about artificial intelligence News Russia watches U.S.-European tensions over Greenland with some glee, gloating and... Burglar breaks into jewelry store via ceiling | FOX 11 Los... News Watches of Switzerland sales jump as shoppers shrug off tariff impact