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AI strengthens organisations’ cybersecurity, says WEF report

A new report by the World Economic Forum (WEF) says artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming cy…
AI strengthens organisations’ cybersecurity, says WEF report

A new report by the World Economic Forum (WEF) says artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming cybersecurity, giving organisations advantage while also increasing threats.

The May report titled, “AI and Cyber: Empowering Defenders”, was developed in collaboration with KPMG and is based on insights from more than 84 organisations across 15 industries.

The study found that 94 per cent of cyber leaders consider AI the key influence in cybersecurity, while 77 per cent of organisations already apply it in their cyber operations.

According to the report, AI is accelerating both cyber threats and defence systems, creating high-speed race between organisations and cyber criminals. 

However, firms that adopt AI strategically are seeing benefits, including threat detection, the report noted. 

Organisations that extensively use AI in cybersecurity can cut breach costs by up to $1.9 million and reduce breach lifecycles by around 80 days, the report said.

Head of the Centre for Cybersecurity, WEF, Akshay Joshi said, “AI has the potential to shift the balance towards defenders.”

“Organisations that treat it as a strategic capability, rather than a standalone tool, will be better placed to turn growing cyber risk into resilience and competitive advantage,” he said.

The report also highlighted some real-world applications of AI across firms. 

It said Accenture reduced security analysis time for more than 100,000 internet-facing sites from 15 minutes to under one minute, while IBM’s ATOM platform automates over 850 analyst hours monthly and cuts investigation time by 37 per cent.

It added that KPMG reported a 25 per cent increase in operational efficiency in threat intelligence.

Despite these gains, the report warned that cyber criminals are also using AI to automate deception, generate malware and scale attacks rapidly.

Laurent Gobbi, partner and global head of cyber & tech risk at KPMG said, “Attackers are moving faster and at greater scale than ever before. This report is a call to action for organisations to match that pace.”

The study stressed that AI’s effectiveness depends on strong governance, clear deployment strategies and human oversight, noting that the technology should complement not replace human expertise.

Building on its 2025 publication on AI and cybersecurity, the WEF initiative called on business and government leaders to treat AI as a core security capability and invest in the skills and systems needed to operate at machine speed.

The findings are part of the forum’s Cyber Frontiers: AI & Cyber initiative, launched in 2024 to explore how AI is reshaping global cybersecurity and to guide organisations on adopting AI to strengthen their skills.

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