ISA unveils Mimo: advanced AI for OT cybersecurity

July 12, 2024
1 min read



TLDR:

ISA has launched Mimo, an AI-powered large-language model trained on ISA content for advanced OT cybersecurity insights. Mimo is available for unlimited use by ISA members and provides detailed answers to user questions about industrial automation and OT cybersecurity.

Article Summary:

The International Society of Automation (ISA) has introduced Mimo, an AI-powered large-language model trained on ISA content to provide advanced OT cybersecurity insights. The model, accessible at www.isa.org/mimo, is educated on ISA standards, training materials, technical reports, white papers, articles, and presentations to answer user questions about industrial automation and OT cybersecurity.

Mimo is continuously trained on new ISA content and takes user feedback into account to enhance its capabilities. ISA members have unlimited access to the service and can delve deeper into the ISA source material referenced in Mimo’s answers. Non-members can also utilize the service, but with limited question capabilities and less detailed responses.

The collaboration between ISA and Betty Bot led to the development of Mimo, which leverages ISA’s technical content repository Pub Hub for exclusive use by members. As users engage with Mimo, the model grows in knowledge and offers a rich and relevant resource for the automation community.

The launch of Mimo reinforces ISA’s commitment to providing various resources for automation professionals to enhance their understanding and career growth. ISA also announced the elevation of four individuals to the distinguished grade of ISA Fellow in 2024, recognizing their significant contributions to the automation profession.


Latest from Blog

Top 20 Linux Admin Tools for 2024

TLDR: Top Linux Admin Tools in 2024 Key points: Linux admin tools streamline system configurations, performance monitoring, and security management. Popular Linux admin tools include Webmin, Puppet, Zabbix, Nagios, and Ansible. Summary

Bogus job tempts aerospace, energy workers

TLDR: A North Korean cyberespionage group is posing as job recruiters to target employees in aerospace and energy sectors. Mandiant reports that the group uses fake job descriptions stored in malicious archives