A French nonprofit has launched a global intelligence and research hub to address emerging cyber threats linked to artificial intelligence. The Paris Peace Forum's project, named IntAIC, seeks to aggregate threat data and enable coordinated responses across sectors.
The initiative's top priority is establishing an international rapid-response coalition involving governments, private companies, and civil society experts. This network would be activated specifically for AI-related cybersecurity incidents, filling a gap in current threat-sharing frameworks.
While specific technical indicators or attack vectors have not been disclosed, the hub will focus on collecting and analyzing intelligence on adversarial AI use, including automated disinformation campaigns, AI-powered malware, and critical system manipulations. Participating organizations will share anonymized threat data through a secure platform.
No concrete mitigation tools or patches are available yet, as the hub is currently in its organizational phase. The Paris Peace Forum expects to release initial findings and best-practice guidelines within the next quarter, with a full operational playbook planned for later in the year.
The project has not publicly attributed the recent surge in AI threats to any specific state or non-state actor. However, it emerges amid a broader push by European nonprofits to establish norms and defenses against weaponized AI, reflecting growing concern over the technology's dual-use nature.