Cybersecurity becomes a major issue in 2025. Attacks are becoming more complex and require advanced strategies to secure sensitive data.
Ransomwares are evolving toward more sophisticated models with double extortion: cybercriminals not only encrypt data but also exfiltrate it, threatening to publish it if the ransom is not paid. Targeted attacks against supply chains have increased by 78% since 2023.
The emergence of quantum computing represents both a threat and an opportunity. While quantum computers could revolutionize cryptography, they also threaten to render current encryption algorithms obsolete. Organizations must start their transition to post-quantum cryptography now.
The attack surface is expanding with the proliferation of connected IoT devices. Each smart sensor, each connected industrial device represents a potential gateway for cybercriminals. Zero-trust security is becoming the norm, requiring constant verification of all entities seeking access to resources.
Deepfake attacks represent a new frontier in cybercrime. Fraudsters now use generative AI to create convincing synthetic voices and videos, making social engineering attacks extremely difficult to detect.
Regulation is evolving rapidly with new directives like NIS2 in Europe, imposing stricter security requirements and significant financial penalties for organizations that do not meet their cybersecurity obligations.