AI
We've curated 1475 cybersecurity statistics about AI to help you understand how machine learning algorithms, automated threat detection, and AI-driven defenses are shaping the landscape of cybersecurity in 2025.
Showing 41-60 of 1475 results
61% of organizations report the use of unsanctioned AI tools, creating significant visibility and governance gaps.
99.6% of organizations are moving toward AI.
40% of IT leaders self-assess as mature in their AI practices, yet only 22% meet objective standards for leading AI readiness.
90% of leaders see productivity gains from AI.
67% of defenders say AI-powered tools have positively impacted threat identification and response.
87% of defenders expect to increase AI use, primarily to replace legacy detection and response tools.
40% of organizations believe they are AI mature, but only 22% possess the objective IT foundation required to scale AI safely.
63% of defenders want AI agents to handle alert triage and investigations.
74% of leaders remain concerned about security risks from AI.
76% of defenders say AI agents or AI assistants now handle more than 10% of their workload.
16% of banks have an enterprise-wide AI roadmap.
82% of credit unions are implementing AI.
67% of banks are implementing AI.
82% of hackers now use AI in their workflows, up from 64% in 2023.
9 in 10 organizations are piloting or using AI in identity and access management (IAM), yet only 7% have organization-wide deployment.
Approximately 45% of advanced email attacks showed indicators of AI assistance, projected to rise to 75–95% within the next 18 months
Only 1% of users click through to source websites that have an AI summary, indicating diminished referral traffic for Media and Entertainment publishers.
66% of IT leaders view AI-generated attacks as the most significant threat to data security, surpassing ransomware at 50%.
22% of IT leaders identified AI maturity and regulation as the second-largest disruptor in 2026.
50% of UK consumers lack understanding of how AI technologies could improve their financial experience, with only 16% reporting full understanding in 2025.