AI-Based Attacks
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Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Critical Infrastructure Security
Also: AI-Driven Deception, Cyber Deterrence and Resilience
In the latest weekly update, ISMG editors reflected on 2025 – a year shaped by the accelerating use of artificial intelligence in cyber deception, intensifying geopolitical tensions and a growing shift from prevention to resilience as attacks increasingly targeted critical infrastructure and exploited human trust.
See Also: AI Arms Cybercriminals and Defenders Must Match Pace
The panelists – Anna Delaney, director, productions; Mathew Schwartz, executive editor of DataBreachToday and Europe; Michael Novinson, executive editor, ISMG Business; and Tom Field, senior vice president, editorial – discussed:
- Highlights from an interview with UC Berkeley Professor and GetReal Labs Founder Hany Farid on how AI-driven deepfakes and social engineering now pose an immediate enterprise threat, with minimal barriers to entry for attackers fueling growing risks to trust, verification and human decision-making across enterprises;
- Key takeaways from an interview with Silverado Policy Accelerator Chairman Dmitri Alperovitch on why cyber operations offer inadequate tools for deterrence, how rising geopolitical tensions are affecting cybersecurity and what ongoing conflicts reveal about the limits of cyber power in modern warfare;
- Insights from an interview with former CISA Director Jen Easterly on the shift from cyberespionage to disruptive nation-state threats against critical infrastructure. She emphasized cyber resilience over prevention and the need for secure-by-design technology to protect resource-constrained organizations.
The ISMG Editors’ Panel runs weekly. Don’t miss our previous installments, including the Dec. 12 edition on how abandoned identities are fueling financial fraud operations and the Dec. 19 edition on why KYC no longer signals trust.

