As Safer Internet Day 2026 approaches, expanding AI capabilities and a rise in network-based attacks are reshaping digital risk. Automated systems now drive both legitimate platforms and criminal activity, prompting leaders at Ping Identity, Cloudflare, KnowBe4, and WatchGuard to call for updated approaches to identity management, network security, and user education. Traditional defences are struggling against faster, more adaptive threats, pushing organisations to rethink protections across access, infrastructure, and human behaviour. While innovation delivers clear benefits, it also equips attackers with powerful tools, increasing risks for businesses, schools, and policymakers who fail to adapt.
Ping Identity highlights a widening gap between legacy security models and modern AI operations. Systems designed for static environments are ill-suited to dynamic AI applications that operate independently and make real-time decisions. Alex Laurie, the company’s go-to-market CTO, explained that AI agents now behave like active users, initiating processes, accessing sensitive data, and choosing next steps without human prompts. Because their actions closely resemble those of real people, distinguishing between human and machine activity is increasingly difficult. Without proper oversight, these agents can introduce unpredictable risks and expand organisational attack surfaces.
Laurie advocates moving beyond static credentials toward continuous, verified trust. Instead of assuming legitimacy after login, organisations should validate identity, intent, and context at every interaction. Access decisions must adapt in real time, guided by behaviour and current risk conditions. This approach enables AI innovation while protecting data and users in an environment filled with autonomous digital actors.
Cloudflare also warns of AI’s dual-use nature. While it boosts efficiency, it accelerates cybercrime by making attacks faster, cheaper, and harder to detect. Pat Breen cited Australian data from 2024–25, when more than 1,200 cyber incidents required response, including a sharp rise in denial-of-service attacks. Such disruptions immediately impact essential services like healthcare, banking, education, transport, and government systems. Whether AI ultimately increases safety or risk depends on how quickly cyber defences evolve.
KnowBe4’s Erich Kron stresses the importance of digital mindfulness as AI-generated content and deepfakes spread. Identifying fake content is no longer a technical skill but a basic life skill. Verifying information, protecting personal data, using strong authentication, and keeping software updated are critical habits for reducing harm.
WatchGuard Technologies reports a shift away from malware toward network-focused attacks.
Anthony Daniel notes that this trend reinforces the need for Zero Trust strategies that verify every connection. Safer Internet Day underscores that cybersecurity is a shared responsibility, strengthened through consistent, everyday actions.
This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents
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