NEWS
BY 2028 , A QUARTER OF ENTERPRISE BREACHES WILL BE TRACED BACK TO AI
Gartner has recently published its top predictions for IT organisations and users in 2025 and beyond . Notably , it predicted that by 2028 , 25 % of enterprise breaches will be traced back to Artificial Intelligence ( AI ) agent abuse , from both external and malicious internal actors .
Gartner suggests that AI substantially expands what is already a vast ‘ invisible attack surface ’ for enterprises . As AI continues to evolve and its capabilities become more accessible to the wider public , the threat of AI agent abuse rises , leading to enterprises being increasingly vulnerable . Consequently , Gartner suggests that organisations need to implement new controls and systems that prevent any potential AI-related enterprise breaches . is also the solution . AI is leading the way for organisations to tackle this wave of cybercrime , becoming many industries ’ greatest weapon in their data protection arsenals .
“ AI can rapidly analyse huge volumes of data to identify unusual patterns that would previously go unnoticed by manual investigation . For example , in the banking industry , it creates predictive models that can forecast future spending for consumers . By doing this , the technology is capable of quickly identifying any unusual buying behaviour that occurs in the event of a person ’ s banking information being breached . It subsequently flags these suspicious activities , mitigating any potential damage .”
Abid Khan , Global Practice Head of Cyber Strategy and Resilience at HGS , believes that although AI abuse will be the source of many cyberbreaches , it also will be the best line of defence against them too : “ Nevertheless , despite AI being tipped as a major catalyst for future enterprise breaches , it
UK BUSINESS LEADERS STRUGGLE TO UNDERSTAND CYBER-RISK
Despite the UK Government ’ s latest figures showing that
74 % of mid-to-large UK businesses have experienced cybercrime , IT and financial leaders working at the UK ’ s largest firms demonstrate a poor understanding of cyberrisk as a financial risk , finds a new survey from cyber-risk solutions company , Resilience .
The results demonstrate a gap in understanding between what actually drives the greatest financial losses for companies versus what drives the media conversation . The results also demonstrate an urgent need for cybersecurity leaders to educate and enable themselves with the right solutions in order to make better business decisions around cybersecurity investment and cyber-risk management . The survey , conducted in partnership with YouGov , surveyed 206 financial and IT decision-makers across UK firms with an annual turnover of more than £ 100 million .
Data breaches were the leading cause of concern for business leaders , with 72 % identifying them as their primary cyber-risk . In contrast , only 47 % of leaders surveyed expressed concerns about ransomware , despite the National Cyber Security Centre ( NCSC ) recognising it as the UK ’ s most significant cyberthreat .
While ransomware has larger financial ramifications for a company , being the cause of more than 80 % of losses for Resilience clients in 2023 – 24 , data breaches subject businesses to stricter scrutiny . Under General Data Protection Regulations , companies must report such incidents within 72 hours , adding pressure to effectively manage these breaches . �
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