GW Engineering alumni are domain experts in their respective fields, regularly sharing their insights on hot-button topics in contributed articles for media outlets. On the topic of confidential computing and software as a service (SaaS), alumnus Aashis Luitel, M.S. ‘20, Ph.D. ‘22, and Leo Scott, M.S. in computer science, recently wrote for Information Week and Unite.AI, respectively.
In the article “Why AI-built tools are threatening SaaS vendor renewals,” Luitel discusses how AI-built tools are changing the way businesses look at SaaS vendor renewals as these emerging tools are cheaper yet may cause unforeseen risks if they fail.
Here is an excerpt from the article: “The question is not whether a customer can build the tool. It is whether the customer wants to own everything that happens after it is built.”
Read the full article on Information Week.
In the article “A Framework for Understanding the Confidential Computing Landscape,” Scott explores recent innovations in the confidential computing space and the issues associated with them, particularly surrounding the use of AI in these frameworks.
Here is an excerpt from the article: “The confidential computing space is at an inflection point. Innovation is happening across TEEs, FHE, and ZK simultaneously, each driven by different communities with different priorities but converging on a shared set of problems.”
Read the full article on Unite.AI.