• Home
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Signup to receive updates
 Innovation | Startups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa
NiRA Event
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Opportunities
  • Funding
  • Women Tech
  • Expert Column
  • Blockchain
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Opportunities
  • Funding
  • Women Tech
  • Expert Column
  • Blockchain
No Result
View All Result
Innovation | Startups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa
No Result
View All Result
Home Industry

GenAI Flaws Raise Cybersecurity Concerns for 89% of IT Leaders — Sophos Report

by Editor
1 year ago
in Industry
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
IT Leaders

Chester Wisniewski, Director, Global Field CTO, Sophos

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

RelatedPosts

Celebrating a Decade of Impact: Africa Skills Hub Rebrands to ASH Africa

Cube Cover, SLOT Roll Out Advanced Device Protection Service in Nigeria

How Smart Glasses Are Rewriting the Rules of Consent in South Africa

AVEVA, IMD Business School Debut Industrial Intelligence Report on Connected Industries

Sophos, a global leader of innovative security solutions for defeating cyberattacks, Tuesday, released a new report, “Beyond the Hype: The Business Reality of AI for Cybersecurity,” which surveyed 400 IT leaders on their use of AI in security.

The survey found that, despite 65% having adopted generative artificial intelligence (GenAI capabilities, 89% of IT leaders are concerned that flaws in GenAI cybersecurity tools could put their organization at risk.

Additionally, according to new Sophos X-Ops research, “Cybercriminals Still Not Getting on Board the AI Train (Yet),” also released today, there has been a slight but noteworthy shift in the way cybercriminals use AI.

After investigating several underground forums, Sophos X-Ops found that, while there’s still skepticism about GenAI, some criminals are using it to automate mundane tasks, such as crafting bulk emails and analyzing data. Others are incorporating it into spam and social engineering toolkits.

“As with many other things in life, the mantra should be ‘trust but verify’ regarding generative AI tools. We have not actually taught the machines to think; we have simply provided them the context to speed up the processing of large quantities of data,” said Chester Wisniewski, director, global field CTO, Sophos. “The potential of these tools to accelerate security workloads is amazing, but it still requires the context and comprehension of their human overseers for this benefit to be realized.”

With some form of AI embedded in the cybersecurity infrastructure of 98% of organizations surveyed, IT leaders expressed concern about potential over-reliance on AI, with 87% of respondents stating they were concerned about a resulting lack of cybersecurity accountability.

GenAI and Reducing Burnout

Different-sized organizations expressed different priorities for utilizing GenAI.

While large organizations (those with more than 1,000 employees) are prioritizing improved protection, respondents with 50-99 employees rated reducing burnout as their top desired benefit from GenAI tools.

However, complicating matters, across all sizes of organizations, 84% of leaders surveyed said they were concerned about pressure to reduce cybersecurity professional headcount due to unrealistic expectations about AI’s abilities to replace human operators.

Other Key Findings from the “Beyond the Hype” Report:

  • Costs of GenAI Are Hard to Quantify: 75% of IT leaders agree that the costs of GenAI in cybersecurity products are hard to quantify.
  • Companies Are Counting on Savings from GenAI: While 80% of IT leaders believe that GenAI will significantly increase the cost of cybersecurity tools, most organizations believe GenAI offers a path to lowering overall cybersecurity expenditure with 87% of respondents believing the savings of GenAI will offset the costs.

To learn more about IT leaders utilizing AI, read the report, “Beyond the Hype: The Businesses Reality of AI for Cybersecurity,” on Sophos.com.

To learn more about cybercriminal attitudes towards GenAI, read the report, “Cybercriminals Still Not Getting on Board the AI Train (Yet),” on Sophos.com.


Don’t miss important articles during the week. Subscribe to techbuild.africa weekly digest for updates

Join @techbuildafrica on Telegram
ShareTweetShareSendShare

Related Posts

ASH Africa
Industry

Celebrating a Decade of Impact: Africa Skills Hub Rebrands to ASH Africa

Cube Cover
Industry

Cube Cover, SLOT Roll Out Advanced Device Protection Service in Nigeria

Smart Glasses
Industry

How Smart Glasses Are Rewriting the Rules of Consent in South Africa

Subscribe Us

Recent Posts

  • Cascador Deploys $5M+ to Back Seven High-Impact Nigerian Startups
  • Celebrating a Decade of Impact: Africa Skills Hub Rebrands to ASH Africa
  • Anara Impact Capital Closes $48M First Fund to Back North Africa’s Impact Startups
  • Conversations 2026:Meet Meta Business Agent
  • Digital Encode Sounds Alarm Over Nigeria’s Rising Cybersecurity Failures
  • PayPal’s Account Crackdown in Kenya Exposes a Bigger Challenge for Cross-Border Payments
  • WhatsApp Experiments With Local Scam Detection to Strengthen User Safety
  • 7 Whale Wallet Patterns That Show Up Before Every Major Crypto Move
  • Africa’s EV Infrastructure Bet Gains Momentum as Spiro Secures $215M in Fresh Capital
  • Cube Cover, SLOT Roll Out Advanced Device Protection Service in Nigeria

Telegram

Join @techbuildafrica on Telegram
Innovation | Startups | Funding | Tech Blog in Africa

© 2013-2024 techbuild.africa. All Rights Reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Sitemap
  • Terms
  • Blockchain
  • CleanTech

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Hubs
  • Funding
  • WomenTech
  • CleanTech
  • Blockchain

© 2013-2024 techbuild.africa. All Rights Reserved.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Secret Link