Exabeam
Facts (11)
Sources
Cybersecurity Trends and Predictions 2025 From Industry Insiders itprotoday.com 10 facts
claimSteve Povolny, senior director of Security Research & Competitive Intelligence and co-founder of TEN18 by Exabeam, predicts that generative AI models trained to create malicious code will emerge in underground markets, allowing individuals without coding skills to deploy ransomware, spyware, and other malware.
perspectiveSteve Wilson, chief product officer at Exabeam, advises that organizations must implement AI-driven security tools that continuously learn from and adapt to emerging attack patterns to counter advanced social engineering attacks.
claimGabrielle Hempel, solutions engineer and TEN18 analyst at Exabeam, predicts that triple extortion attacks will become a prevalent method in 2025, where hackers steal data and demand ransoms not only from the primary victimized company but also from their partners, suppliers, and customers.
claimSteve Wilson, chief product officer at Exabeam, observes that AI's ability to identify weaknesses faster than humans will significantly shrink the time between vulnerability discovery and exploitation.
claimSteve Wilson, chief product officer at Exabeam, advises companies to integrate generative AI copilots by ensuring interoperability with existing security infrastructure and training operators to collaborate with AI assistance.
perspectiveSteve Wilson, chief product officer at Exabeam, recommends that organizations adopt predictive AI capabilities and tools that simulate attack vectors to proactively identify and patch vulnerabilities.
claimSteve Povolny, senior director of Security Research & Competitive Intelligence and co-founder of TEN18 by Exabeam, predicts that video-based deepfakes will become highly realistic and imperceptible from reality in 2025.
claimSteve Povolny, senior director of Security Research & Competitive Intelligence and co-founder of TEN18 by Exabeam, describes 'hacker-in-a-box' tools as automated systems that handle writing and deploying attacks, which will democratize cybercrime and increase the volume and diversity of threats.
claimSteve Wilson, chief product officer at Exabeam, states that training employees to recognize AI-powered threats will become essential for organizations.
claimSteve Wilson, chief product officer at Exabeam, predicts that by 2025, cyber attackers will use generative AI with improved reasoning abilities to execute realistic phishing scams, including deepfake voices and video avatars, and perform complex automated probing for vulnerabilities.
Cyber Insights 2025: Open Source and Software Supply Chain ... securityweek.com Jan 15, 2025 1 fact
claimSteve Wilson, Chief Product Officer at Exabeam, predicts that in 2025, the adoption of Software Bill of Materials (SBOMs) will expand beyond traditional software, with AI and machine learning applications driving demand for more advanced Bill of Materials frameworks.