Gartner: Three Ways
To Prepare for Emerging Threat Landscape
June 8, 2022
As
cybersecurity strategy, leadership and technologies
continue to evolve Gartner highlighted three steps
security leaders can take now to prepare for the
emerging threat landscape over the next 10 years.
“The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) is a
double-edged sword for CISOs,” said
Katell Thielemann, VP analyst at
Gartner. “Enterprises are facing a deluge of
automated cyberattacks, which are exponentially rising
in velocity, variety and complexity. However, AI is
simultaneously supporting security teams in detecting
and responding to threats, fundamentally changing
organizations’ defense paradigms.”
Gartner analysts identified three ways that security
leaders can prepare for the evolution of cybersecurity
during the Opening Keynote of the Gartner Security &
Risk Management Summit, taking place in National Harbor
through Friday.
“If the 2020s were the decade of ‘hybrid everything,’
the 2030s will be the decade of ‘augmented everything,’”
added Andrew Walls, distinguished VP analyst at Gartner.
“Attackers are weaponizing AI just as fast as
organizations augment their defenses with it, meaning
that it’s not enough for cybersecurity technologies to
evolve – strategy and leadership approaches must change,
too.”
“A business’s cyber
risk is changing constantly, at an increasing pace”,
says
Rajeev Gupta, CPO at Cowbell Cyber.
“It’s crucial that your cyber insurance policy can
reflect those changes. Yearly risk assessments are
insufficient. With Cowbell’s cyber insurance policies,
the business’s cyber risk posture gets assessed
continuously, and we work with cybersecurity partners to
manage and hopefully reduce cyber risk for
policyholders.”
Invoke Continuous Foresight
Security leaders must look beyond immediate threats and
embrace continuous foresight, a strategy that integrates
research insights into internal capabilities and
third-party tools to maintain a proactive security
approach.
Gartner forecasts that information security spending
will reach $187 billion in 2023, an increase of 11.1%
from 2022. As security budgets continue to rise, CEOs
and Boards of Directors will expect a highly strategic
approach to security investment that results in
demonstrable returns typified by fewer breaches and
greater enterprise resilience. Pursuing multiple models
of the future will enable security leaders to build an
investment strategy that is flexible enough to respond
to new threats with agility.
Play
to Your Strengths as a Leader, But Know Your Weaknesses
Effective enterprise cybersecurity requires deep
technical, business and strategy expertise, yet it is
unlikely that one security leader excels in all three
areas. In fact, Gartner predicts that by 2025, a single,
centralized cybersecurity function will not be agile
enough to meet the needs of a digital organization.
“The most effective CISOs don’t try to do it all,” said
Thielemann. “Play to your strengths as a leader, and
then augment your teams with those who complement your
weaknesses.”
Remember the Attack is Never Over
The nature of technology is one of perpetual change,
meaning that new attack techniques and threat vectors
will continue to emerge as new technologies do. Security
leaders must remain on the cutting edge of technology
innovation by investigating solutions including
cybersecurity mesh architecture, AI-augmented security
tools, homomorphic confidential computing and other
emerging security technologies.
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