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Attackers Increasingly Targeting Cloud, AI Systems — Campus Technology
Report: Attackers Increasingly Targeting Cloud, AI Systems
According to CrowdStrike’s 2025 Threat Hunting Report, adversaries are not just using AI to supercharge attacks — they are actively targeting the AI systems organizations deploy in production. Combined with a surge in cloud exploitation, this shift marks a significant change in the threat landscape for enterprises.
Cloud Intrusions Reach Record Levels
The report notes a sharp escalation in attacks aimed at cloud environments. CrowdStrike threat hunters identified a 136% increase in cloud intrusions in the first half of 2025 compared to all of 2024, with a 40% year-over-year rise in cloud-conscious intrusions attributed to suspected China-nexus actors. Threat groups such as GENESIS PANDA and MURKY PANDA have proven adept at evading detection by exploiting misconfigurations, abusing trusted relationships, and manipulating cloud control planes to achieve persistence, lateral movement, and data exfiltration.
In detailed case studies, GENESIS PANDA was seen leveraging credentials from compromised virtual machines to pivot into cloud service accounts, establishing “various forms of persistence” including identity-based access keys and SSH keys. MURKY PANDA demonstrated the ability to compromise a supplier’s administrative access to a victim’s Entra ID tenant, then backdoor service principals to gain access to e-mail and other sensitive assets. Such tactics underscore that cloud administration tooling itself is a prime attack surface.
AI as Both a Weapon and a Target
The report’s headline theme is the rise of AI in both offensive and defensive cyber operations — but with a critical warning for defenders. Threat actors are using generative AI to accelerate intrusion workflows, improve phishing lures, create deepfake personas, automate malware development, and enhance technical problem-solving. At the same time, they are increasingly exploiting vulnerabilities in AI platforms themselves as an initial access vector.
CrowdStrike highlighted CVE-2025-3248 in the report, described as “an unauthenticated code injection vulnerability in Langflow AI,” a widely used framework for building AI agents and workflows. By exploiting it, attackers were able to achieve “unauthenticated remote code execution” and pursue persistence, credential theft (including cloud environment credentials), and malware deployment. This signals a fundamental shift: “Threat actors are viewing AI tools as integrated infrastructure rather than peripheral applications, targeting them as primary attack vectors.”
North Korea-nexus FAMOUS CHOLLIMA exemplifies AI weaponization. In over 320 incidents in the past year, operatives used GenAI to draft résumés, create synthetic identities with altered photos, mask their true appearance in live video interviews using real-time deepfake technology, and leverage AI code assistants for on-the-job tasks. CrowdStrike notes that this represents “a 220% year-over-year increase” in such infiltrations.
This growing trend of targeting AI platforms parallels another key avenue of attack highlighted in the report: identity compromise. Just as adversaries exploit weaknesses in AI tools to gain privileged access, they also exploit weaknesses in human and process-driven identity verification to move laterally across environments. These identity-driven breaches often serve as the connective tissue in complex, cross-domain attacks.
Identity as the Gateway in Cross-Domain Attacks
Tools & Platforms
AI: The new frontier at the Institute for Continued Learning in St. George – St. George News
Tools & Platforms
Colleges should go ‘medieval’ on students to beat AI cheating, NYU official says

Educators have been struggling over how students should or should not use artificial intelligence, but one New York University official suggests going old school—really, really old school.
In a New York Times op-ed on Tuesday, NYU’s vice provost for AI and technology in education, Clay Shirky, said he previously had counseled more “engaged uses” of AI where students use the technology to explore ideas and seek feedback, rather than “lazy AI use.”
But that didn’t work, as students continued using AI to write papers and skip the reading. Meanwhile, tools meant to detect AI cheating produce too many false positives to be reliable, he added.
“Now that most mental effort tied to writing is optional, we need new ways to require the work necessary for learning,” Shirky explained. “That means moving away from take-home assignments and essays and toward in-class blue book essays, oral examinations, required office hours and other assessments that call on students to demonstrate knowledge in real time.”
Such a shift would mark a return to much older practices that date back to Europe’s medieval era, when books were scarce and a university education focused on oral instruction instead of written assignments.
In medieval times, students often listened to teachers read from books, and some schools even discouraged students from writing down what they heard, Shirky said. The emphasis on writing came hundreds of years later in Europe and reached U.S. schools in the late 19th century.
“Which assignments are written and which are oral has shifted over the years,” he added. “It is shifting again, this time away from original student writing done outside class and toward something more interactive between student and professor or at least student and teaching assistant.”
That may entail device-free classrooms as some students have used AI chatbots to answer questions when called on during class.
He acknowledged logistical challenges given that some classes have hundreds of students. In addition, an emphasis on in-class performance favors some students more than others.
“Timed assessment may benefit students who are good at thinking quickly, not students who are good at thinking deeply,” Shirky said. “What we might call the medieval options are reactions to the sudden appearance of AI, an attempt to insist on students doing work, not just pantomiming it.”
To be sure, professors are also using AI, not just students. While some use it to help develop a course syllabus, others are using it to help grade essays. In some cases, that means AI is grading an AI-generated assignment.
AI use by educators has also generated backlash among students. A senior at Northeastern University even filed a formal complaint and demanded a tuition refund after discovering her professor was secretly using AI tools to generate lecture notes.
Meanwhile, students are also getting mixed messages, hearing that the use of AI in school counts as cheating but also that not being able to use AI will hurt their job prospects. At the same time, some schools have no guidelines on AI.
“Whatever happens next, students know AI is here to stay, even if that scares them,” Rachel Janfaza, founder of Gen Z-focused consulting firm Up and Up Strategies, wrote in the Washington Post on Thursday.
“They’re not asking for a one-size-fits-all approach, and they’re not all conspiring to figure out the bare minimum of work they can get away with. What they need is for adults to act like adults — and not leave it to the first wave of AI-native students to work out a technological revolution all by themselves.”
Tools & Platforms
SPU & RevisionSuccess lead AI workshop for student innovation

RevisionSuccess and Sripatum University (SPU) jointly hosted a workshop designed to introduce over 200 students to the applications of artificial intelligence (AI) in education and entrepreneurship.
The event, held at the School of Entrepreneurship on SPU’s Bangkok campus, was designed to provide students with practical experience using emerging digital tools. This workshop is part of an established collaboration between RevisionSuccess and SPU, which includes a formal Memorandum of Understanding, and builds on ongoing efforts to support educational advancement in Thailand.
Collaborative mission
The workshop carried the theme “AIvolution in Education,” focusing on how AI technology can personalise learning, increase engagement, and provide students with skills needed for both academic and professional pursuits. It also provided students with the opportunity to explore how AI can support entrepreneurial activities in a technology-focused business environment.
“Our partnership with RevisionSuccess has always been guided by a shared mission – to give students the tools they need to succeed in the digital age,” said Dr. Kriangkrai Satjaharuthai, Dean of the School of Entrepreneurship at SPU, who delivered the keynote address. “AI is not just a trend; it is becoming the backbone of future education and business. We want our students to be ready for this transformation, and today’s workshop has given them that first-hand experience.”
Hands-on experience
A key activity during the workshop was a large-scale, interactive game that involved all participating students. The game session was designed to demonstrate how AI-powered tools can enhance engagement and collaboration, providing students with a sense of how technology can bring learning concepts to life.
“We believe that learning should not only be effective but also fun, engaging, and scalable,” said Phonlawat Sirajindapirom of RevisionSuccess, who co-led the workshop alongside colleagues Phuwadit Sutthaporn and Pingkan Rerkpatanapipat. “Through this activity, students experienced how AI can bridge the gap between theory and practice, giving them practical insights into how innovation can be applied to their entrepreneurial journeys.”
AI supporting educators
The workshop speakers discussed the role of AI as a supplementary resource for teachers. They highlighted how AI can adapt instruction to individual student needs and simplify complex material, without attempting to replace educators themselves.
“Our role as educators is evolving,” added Dr. Kriangkrai. “Instead of being the sole source of information, we now serve as facilitators who help students use technology to unlock their potential. The key is to embrace AI as an ally, not a competitor.”
Pingkan Rerkpatanapipat of RevisionSuccess also commented on the potential of AI in shaping the learning environment.
“AI offers us the chance to reimagine the classroom – to create a space where learning adapts to the student, rather than the other way around. At RevisionSuccess, we are committed to working hand-in-hand with institutions like SPU to ensure that innovation leads to inclusion and accessibility for all students.”
Entrepreneurial focus
According to the organisers, the workshop’s emphasis on entrepreneurship aligned with national efforts in Thailand to strengthen digital skills and innovation. The agenda included demonstrations of AI as a business tool, intended to prepare students for future careers in a rapidly evolving market.
One student participant reflected on the benefits of the session, stating, “This workshop has broadened my perspective. I can see how AI can help me both in my studies and in the business I want to start after graduation. It makes learning more efficient and gives me new ideas for innovation.”
Feedback from participants indicates that the value students found in connecting their academic experience with real-world business concepts, enabled by AI technology, was significant.
Continuous development
The event concluded with a commemorative group photo featuring Dr. Kriangkrai, other faculty members, and the RevisionSuccess team. Organisers described this closing as a reflection of their commitment to continued collaboration in support of educational adaptation and progress.
“Our collaboration with SPU is about more than hosting events – it’s about creating a movement towards smarter, more inclusive, and more engaging education in Thailand,” said Phuwadit Sutthaporn of RevisionSuccess. “We are excited to continue building on this momentum with future initiatives.”
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