Your guide to AI security
Explore the free TSC Guide to AI security eBook and defend against AI threats.
Protect Your Organisation from AI-Powered Cyber Threats
Artificial Intelligence is transforming how organisations operate - but it's also creating unprecedented security risks. Cybercriminals are weaponising AI to launch more sophisticated attacks: AI-powered phishing, deepfake-based social engineering, voice cloning scams, and automated ransomware that evades detection.
65% of customers have lost trust in organisations over their AI practices. Your employees need to understand these emerging threats - before they become your next breach. This is essential reading for security leaders, IT teams, and anyone responsible for protecting organisational data.
In this free eBook, you'll discover:
Get your free copy of Your Guide to AI Security
Download our free eBook and give your teams the knowledge they need to recognise and stop AI-powered attacks - from deepfake fraud and cloned voices to AI-generated phishing and adaptive ransomware.
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AI Security - FAQ
What are emerging AI cyber threats?
Emerging AI cyber threats include AI-generated phishing (now created in minutes instead of hours), real-time voice cloning, deepfake fraud, self-learning malware like BlackMamba, AI-powered password and 2FA cracking, SEO/data poisoning, and early-stage quantum attacks. These threats move at machine speed, while human-led defences still lag behind.
How much audio does it take to clone someone's voice?
As little as 15 words of audio is enough to build a convincing voice clone using tools like Respeecher, which attackers have used for CEO fraud and fake emergency calls impersonating family members. Keeping personal audio and video private, and agreeing a verbal code word with family, helps reduce this risk.
What is Q-Day and why does it matter for cybersecurity?
Q-Day is the point at which quantum computers become powerful enough to break today's encryption, potentially letting attackers exfiltrate an organisation's data within seconds. Experts expect this within five to ten years, so organisations need to start planning quantum-resistant defences now rather than after Q-Day arrives.