Artificial intelligence is changing the speed of cybercrime in a big way, taking away the time that organizations used to have to find and respond to it This article explores changing speed cybercrime. . Aamir Lakhani from Fortinet talks about how attackers are always looking for new targets and are ready to attack when they find a weakness.
He says, "Hackers aren't hacking you anymore; they're just getting into your systems." This is because credential harvesting and reuse are common ways to get in. Also, the rapid growth of identity creates billions of new access points that need to be protected. Lakhni says that the world needs to rethink how it thinks about identity, data exposure, and automation while also making sure that AI doesn't leak sensitive information.
He is the World Economic Forum's Global Director of Threat Intelligence and Adversarial Artificial Intelligence Research.






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