Cybersecurity Threats May Come from Unexpected Sources as AI-savvy Workers Could Perpetrate More Attacks – Report

When it comes to cybercriminals and threat vectors, “expect the unexpected.” Experian’s Data Breach Industry Forecast noted while sharing key predictions for 2025 covering a range of potential trends with AI at the forefront including growing sources of threats such as “AI-savvy teens and fresh targets for hackers of AI power centers.”

Global data breaches show no signs of slowing down as this year has already exceeded 2023 in the “number of data breaches and consumers impacted.”

Businesses and consumers need to “stay vigilant” and keep on eye on these predictions for 2025:

  • Smells Like Teen Secret: Today, the world of cyber hacking is not confined to grown ups nor is the fallout. According to the FBI, the average age of someone arrested for cybercrime is 19 vs. 37 for any crime. Many teens will have been recruited into the “business” by more sophisticated fraudsters, who reach them through online gaming, chat and social media.
  • The Enemy Within: Internal Fraud Will Rise: As more companies continue to train their employees on the responsible use of AI, we could see a marked increase in the use of that AI education by those very same employees for internal theft, sensitive information sourcing, and much more.
  • Power-Hungry Data Centers Become Favored Target: Global cyberattackers have had large data centers in their sights for years, but one clear attack vector has emerged with the exponential growth of consumer and business use of generative AI: power. On average, a singleChatGPT query uses nearly 10 times more electricity to process than a standard Google search. All these entities represent new attack surfaces that could be disrupted by bad actors.
  • Eating Their Own: Predators Become Prey: A recent story of hackers being duped by sophisticated malware from a more malicious hacker and losing their funds points to a fast-growing trend in the high-stakes world of cybercrime: the predators becoming the prey. The next year may see a marked increase in hacker-on-hacker attacks either for political or monetary reasons.
  • Dynamic Identification is Next Defense Against Fraud: Normal 256 Bit Encryption is becoming obsolete, and AI-driven fraud is increasing in sophistication so quickly that fraudsters will soon be able to create virtually undiscernible proof-of-life documents that will fool even the most discriminating eye or identification system.

Michael Bruemmer, vice president of Global Data Breach Resolution at Experian said:

“Investments in cybersecurity will increase to tackle this emerging threat while hackers are having a field day leveraging it for everything from phishing attacks and password cracking to producing malware and deepfakes.”

Jim Steven, Head of Crisis and Data Response Services at Experian Global Data Breach Resolution in the United Kingdom:

“We expect that globally data breaches continue at the current pace next year with ransomware being even more sophisticated with the use of AI. We may also see threat actors escalating risks to gain greater rewards and the use of consumer data to damage reputations rising in 2025.

Experian Global Data Breach Resolution offers resources for companies impacted by a security incident and services “include IdentityWorks Global, multilingual call centers, and notifications covering more than 100 countries.”



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