Cybersecurity And AI

Cybersecurity And AI

Cybersecurity and AI are increasingly getting involved in our day-to-day lives. And with this comes a new threat from Agentic AI: Cyberattacks. Cybersecurity...

Md Tousif
Md Tousif
3 min read

Cybersecurity and AI are increasingly getting involved in our day-to-day lives. And with this comes a new threat from Agentic AI: Cyberattacks. Cybersecurity and AI are becoming the hottest topics in the tech industry right now. AI has the ability to find loopholes in the current state-of-the-art systems. And this will not turn out to be good if the AI lands in the hands of a bad actor. Therefore, it is paramount that we refactor today’s systems so that they can defend against cyber attacks from AI. 

Current State of Cybersecurity and AI


The cybersecurity and AI landscape in 2026 looks very different from what it did even three years ago. Attacks are faster, smarter, and harder to detect. And AI is the mastermind behind all of this.

On one side, AI is being used by security teams to monitor networks, detect threats, and respond to incidents in real time. On the other side, bad actors are using the same AI tools to launch attacks that traditional security systems simply cannot keep up with.

According to recent data, the global cost of cybercrime is expected to hit $10.5 trillion annually by 2025. Phishing attacks are more believable than ever because AI can now generate convincing emails and messages at scale. Ransomware attacks have grown more targeted, and AI is being used to identify the most valuable systems to lock down before demanding payment.

The numbers are alarming. But what is even more alarming is that most organizations are still relying on old systems and old thinking to fight these new threats.

How are Cybersecurity and AI linked to each other?


Cybersecurity and AI are not just related. They are deeply connected at the core.

AI makes cybersecurity faster. Security teams deal with thousands of alerts every single day. No human team can manually go through all of them. AI tools help filter out the noise and flag only the threats that actually need attention. This saves time and reduces the chance of missing something critical.

But AI also makes attacks more dangerous. Hackers can now use AI to scan for vulnerabilities in a system at a speed that no human team can match. They can test thousands of entry points in minutes. They can even use AI to adapt their attacks in real time based on how a system responds.

This creates what many in the field call an AI arms race. The tools used to defend systems are the same tools being used to attack them. And that is why the connection between cybersecurity and AI is no longer optional. If you are working in one, you need to understand the other.

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