SolarWinds: IT Professionals Want AI, But Fear Shortcomings in Data Quality, Privacy, Security
SolarWinds, a
provider of observability and IT management software, has released the findings
from its 2024 IT Trends Report, AI: Friend or Foe? The report, based on a
survey of nearly 700 IT professionals about their views on artificial
intelligence (AI), found that despite a near-unanimous desire to adopt AI
technology, very few respondents have confidence in their organization's readiness
to integrate AI, pointing to limitations in data and infrastructure and
security concerns.
The report found that while IT professionals have a growing
interest in embracing AI technology, with nine out of ten already using or
planning to use AI, concerns remain about data quality, database infrastructure
readiness and above all else, security and privacy.
"While talk of AI has dominated the industry, IT leaders
and teams recognize the outsize risks of the still-developing technology,
heightened by the rush to build AI quickly rather than smartly," said
Krishna Sai, SVP, Technology and Engineering, SolarWinds. "With the proper
internal systems in place and by prioritizing security, fairness and
transparency while building AI, these technologies can serve as a valuable
advisor and coworker to overworked teams, but this survey shows that IT
professionals need to be consulted as their companies invest in AI."
Overall, the industry's sentiment reflects cautious optimism
about AI despite the obstacles. 46 percent of IT professionals want their
company to move faster in implementing AI despite costs, challenges and
concerns, but only 43 percent are confident that their company's databases can
meet the increased needs of AI. Moreover, only 38 percent of IT professionals
trust the quality of data or training used in developing AI technologies.
The report unveiled significant insights into IT
professionals' perspectives on AI, including:
AIOps Drives Efficiency and Productivity: 31 percent of IT professionals cited AIOps as
the AI technology that will have the most significant positive impact on their
role, ranking above large language models and machine learning. 38 percent of
respondents said their companies already use AI to make IT operations more
efficient and effective.
Distrust of Data Powering AI: Only 38 percent of respondents are very
trusting of the data quality and training used in AI technologies, and rank
data quality as a major barrier to AI adoption, second only to security and
privacy risks. Because of this, today's IT teams see AI as an advisor (33
percent) and a sidekick (20 percent) rather than a solo decision-maker.
Privacy and Security Concerns Are Barriers to AI Adoption: Respondents overwhelmingly named privacy and security
concerns as the most significant barrier to AI integration. When asked about
their challenges with AI, 41 percent of respondents said they have had negative
experiences. Of those, privacy concerns (48 percent) and security risks (43
percent) were most often cited as the reasons why.
IT Professionals Call for Government Regulation: IT professionals specifically call for increased
government regulations to address security (72 percent) and privacy (64
percent). More than half of respondents also believe government regulation
should play a role in combating misinformation, as training AI models,
including data quality, is a matter of both ethics and security.
To ensure successful and secure AI adoption, IT professionals
recognize that organizations must develop thorough policies on ethics, data
privacy and compliance, pointing to ethical considerations and concerns about
job displacement as other significant barriers to AI adoption. The SolarWinds
report found that 35.6 percent of organizations still don't have these policies
in place to guide proper AI implementation.
In keeping with SolarWinds' history of working alongside the
IT community and to address these concerns about the development of AI, the
company recently unveiled its AI by Design framework, a new industry model for
the ethical and secure development of advanced AI technologies. AI by Design is
built on four guiding principles: prioritizing privacy and security, focusing
on accountability and fairness to eliminate biases, emphasizing transparency
and trust, and ensuring simplicity and accessibility for seamless integration
into workflows.
Built on the success of its Secure by Design initiative, the
company believes that the new AI by Design framework will set a model for how
the broader industry should approach AI. The company also recently announced
its new SolarWinds AI generative AI engine, which was purpose-built using the
AI by Design framework.
The company's recent AI investments build on its longstanding
commitment to helping modern IT teams embrace advanced technologies and
navigate the emerging challenges of modern hybrid on-prem and multi-cloud
digital environments. The company's suite of observability, database and
service management solutions are designed to optimize today's hybrid IT
environments and simplify the lives of IT professionals.
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