Two in three organizations plan to deploy AI to bolster their defense
Businesses are increasing the pace of investment in AI systems to defend against the next generation of cyber attacks, a new study from the Capgemini Research Institute has found. Two thirds (69%) of organizations acknowledge that they will not be able to respond to critical threats without AI. With the number of end-user devices, networks, and user interfaces growing as a result of advances in the cloud, IoT, 5G and conversational interface technologies, organizations face an urgent need to continually ramp up and improve their cybersecurity.
AI-enabled cybersecurity is now an imperative
Over half (56%) of executives say their cybersecurity analysts are overwhelmed by the vast array of data points they need to monitor to detect and prevent intrusion. In addition, the type of cyber attacks that require immediate intervention, or that cannot be remediated quickly enough by cyber analysts, have notably increased, including:
- cyberattacks affecting time-sensitive applications (42% saying they had gone up, by an average of 16%).
- automated, machine-speed attacks that mutate at a pace that cannot be neutralized through traditional response systems (43% reported an increase, by an average of 15%).
Facing these new threats, a clear majority of companies (69%) believe they will not be able to respond to cyber attacks without the use of AI, while 61% say they need AI to identify critical threats. One in five executives experienced a cybersecurity breach in 2018, 20% of which cost their organization over $50m.
Executives are accelerating AI investment in cybersecurity
A clear majority of executives accept that AI is fundamental to the future of cybersecurity:
- 64% said it lowers the cost of detecting breaches and responding to them – by an average of 12%.
- 74% said it enables a faster response time: reducing time taken to detect threats, remedy breaches and implement patches by 12%.
- 69% also said AI improves the accuracy of detecting breaches, and 60% said it increases the efficiency of cybersecurity analysts, reducing the time they spend analyzing false positives and improving productivity.
Accordingly, almost half (48%) said that budgets for AI in cybersecurity will increase in FY2020 by nearly a third (29%). In terms of deployment, 73% are testing use cases for AI in cybersecurity. Only one in five organizations used AI pre-2019 but adoption is poised to skyrocket: almost two out of three (63%) organizations plan to deploy AI by 2020 to bolster their defenses.
“AI offers huge opportunities for cybersecurity,” says Oliver Scherer, CISO of Europe’s leading consumer electronics retailer, MediaMarktSaturn Retail Group.” However, there are significant barriers to implementing AI at scale: The number-one challenge for implementing AI for cybersecurity is a lack of understanding of how to scale use cases from proof of concept to full-scale deployment. 69% of those surveyed admitted that they struggled in this area.
Additionally, half of the surveyed organizations cited integration challenges with their current infrastructure, data systems, and application landscapes. Although the majority of executives say they know what they want to achieve from AI in cybersecurity, only half (54%) have identified the data sets required to operationalize AI algorithms.