
"At a team level, AI is better enabling early threat detection, threat triage and summarisation. Many different roles are becoming more reliant on intelligent technology. Security Operations Centre (SOC) analysts are using AI to identify the truly credible threats, reducing alert fatigue. AI is helping them to improve the visibility of risks, prioritise them and make decisions on next steps."
"At a leadership level, Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) and/or the technology leader with responsibility for cybersecurity (such as the CIO) are expected by their boards to be fully in tune with the latest concepts and trends in security and protection, including the use of AI. The next generation of firewalls, for example, are becoming AI-enabled, as are the latest Network Detection & Response systems (NDRs)."
Some 90% of businesses are either piloting AI or carrying out small- or large-scale implementations, up from 59% in 2023. Cybersecurity concern is rising as major attacks increase, with 29% of technology leaders reporting a major attack in the past two years, the highest level since 2019. AI is increasingly deployed by cybersecurity teams, driving demand for AI skills and capabilities. CISOs and technology leaders are expected by boards to be fully aware of AI-enabled security trends. Next-generation firewalls and Network Detection & Response systems are becoming AI-enabled. AI improves early threat detection, triage, summarisation, alert reduction, risk visibility, prioritisation, and supports threat hunters and penetration testing teams.
Read at ComputerWeekly.com
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