VentureBeat November 14, 2024
Louis Columbus

By 2025, weaponized AI attacks targeting identities—unseen and often the most costly to recover from—will pose the greatest threat to enterprise cybersecurity. Large language models (LLMs) are the new power tool of choice for rogue attackers, cybercrime syndicates and nation-state attack teams.

A recent survey found that 84% of IT and security leaders say that when AI-powered tradecraft is the attack strategy for launching phishing and smishing attacks, they’re increasingly complex to identify and stop. As a result, 51% of security leaders are prioritizing AI-driven attacks as the most severe threat facing their organizations. While the vast majority of security leaders, 77%, are confident they know the best practices for AI security, just 35% believe their organizations are prepared today...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: AI (Artificial Intelligence), Technology
AI agents’ momentum won’t stop in 2025
The cybersecurity provider’s next opportunity: Making AI safer
OpenAI launches ChatGPT desktop integrations, rivaling Copilot
Apple’s AI-Powered Smart Home Hub May Include eCommerce Capabilities
IPO Market Struggles as Investors Flock to AI

Share This Article