Darktrace unveiled its 2025 State of AI Cybersecurity report. The findings reveal
that 78% of Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) surveyed say that
AI-powered threats are having a significant impact on their organizations, a 5%
increase1 from 2024. While an increasing number of CISOs report feeling a
significant impact from AI threats, more than 60% now say that they are
adequately prepared to defend against these threats, an increase of nearly 15%
year-over-year. However, insufficient AI knowledge and skills and a shortage of
personnel and talent continue to be listed as the two top inhibitors to a
successful defense.
"The impact of AI on cybersecurity is clear and
increasing. There are more employees and enterprise applications using AI that
must be protected. Adversaries are using it to make their attacks more
targeted, scalable, and successful. All of this is unfolding in a highly
volatile geopolitical environment that is creating more uncertainty," said
Jill Popelka, CEO, Darktrace. "There has never been a more urgent need for
AI in the SOC to augment teams and pre-empt threats so organizations can build
their cyber resilience. That's why Darktrace continues to invest in new
innovations to help customers manage risk and thrive in this new era of AI
threats."
The second annual report surveyed over 1,500 cybersecurity
professionals holding roles ranging from CISO to IT security managers, IT
security analysts and incident responders, across 14 different countries.
Key findings from the report include:
- The increasing impact of
AI-powered threats: This
year, 78% of CISOs surveyed agreed that AI-powered cyber threats are
having a significant impact on their organization, up 5% from 2024. AI
combined with the increase of cybercrime-as-a-service and
automation is increasing the sophistication and diversity of attack
techniques faster than ever - from AI-enhanced phishing
campaigns to evolving ransomware strains.
- A gap between confidence
in AI and comprehension of how it can be best deployed: 95% of all
cybersecurity professionals surveyed believe AI can improve the speed and
efficiency of their ability to prevent, detect, respond and recover from
threats, but significant knowledge gaps persist. Only 42% reported that
they fully understand the types of AI in their current security stack. The
gap increases across different roles, with 60% of CISOs reporting they
know exactly what AI types are used versus 10% of IT security
analysts/operators and 14% of IT security administrators. Moreover, two of
the top three inhibitors reported to defending against AI-powered threats
include insufficient knowledge or use of AI-driven countermeasures and
insufficient knowledge/skills pertaining to AI technology.
- Teams are turning to AI
to navigate talent and skills shortages: Despite respondents citing insufficient personnel
to manage tools and alerts as the greatest inhibitor to defending against
AI-powered threats, only 11% reported that they plan to increase
cybersecurity staff in 2025, down from last year. AI is seen by this
group as essential to augment human team members, with 64% reporting that
they plan to add AI-powered solutions to their security stack in
the next year and 88% reporting that the use of AI is critical to free up
time for security teams to become more proactive.
- Managing risk is a
priority, but more action is needed: 95% of all respondents report that their
organization is either currently discussing (50%) or has already
implemented (45%) a formal policy for safe and secure use of AI. This
varies regionally and by industry. 52% of organizations in North America
and 43% of organizations in EMEA report having a formal policy in place.
Organizations in the financial services, retail and technology sectors
globally report the highest level of policies currently in place. At the
same time, only 45% of respondents report that they have a formal AI
oversight and governance function and only 37% report that they regularly
monitor or audit AI usage and outputs.
- Data privacy and a
platform approach are top priorities: When asked about their cybersecurity technology
preferences, respondents highlighted the importance of data privacy and a
platform approach. Notably, 84% reported that they prefer solutions that
don't require external data sharing and 87% indicated they prefer a
platform approach over implementing a collection of point solutions.
- Cloud and network
security seen as key areas for future impact of AI: When asked to look
ahead at the future impact of AI in cyber defense, cloud security (66%)
and network
security (55%) are identified as two domains where cybersecurity
professionals expect defensive AI to have the biggest impact.
"The integrity and reliability of IT systems are under
increasing pressure as adversaries harness Generative AI to amplify their
attacks. The rapid evolution of AI-powered threats is forcing security teams to
rethink their defensive strategies, as traditional cybersecurity measures can
no longer match the speed, scale, and sophistication of modern attacks," said
Jon Mendoza, CISO of Technologent, a global provider of IT solutions and
services for Fortune 1000 companies. "To stay ahead, organizations must
integrate AI-driven security solutions that not only detect and respond to threats but proactively
anticipate them. True resilience comes not just from deploying AI but from
empowering security teams with the knowledge and tools to wield it effectively.
A security platform built on actionable-intelligence and hyper-automation is
essential to containing threats and minimizing the blast radius of attacks. In
today's ever-evolving threat landscape, AI isn't just an advantage-it's a
fundamental necessity."