How AI, attacker economics and shifting priorities are reshaping cyber defence
Tuesday, 21st October at 14:00 BST | 15:00 CEST / SAST
Speakers
- Naz Bozdemir, Product Marketing Lead, HackerOne
- Nick Brownrigg, Director of Solution Architecture, Integrity360
AI is no longer a distant threat. It’s already here and transforming how attackers operate and how defenders must respond.
Join Integrity360’s Director of Solution Architecture Nick Brownrigg and HackerOne’s Product Marketing Lead Naz Bozdemir for a candid discussion on what the latest security and programme data really means for defenders. You’ll hear how leading organisations are evolving their strategies, where attackers are spotting blind spots, and what you can do now to prepare for the next wave of threats.
What will be covered?
- A breakdown of the EU Data Act and AI Act, including immediate August 2025 compliance priorities and future milestones.
- Establish clarity on immediate and long-term legal compliance paths.
- Gain insights into aligning data strategy and AI governance with the EU’s regulatory vision.
- How to avoid costly missteps as the EU sets global precedents in digital policy.
Who should attend?
This webinar is designed for CISOs, security leaders, IT directors, compliance officers, risk managers and senior decision-makers responsible for shaping and running modern security programmes. It’s also valuable for security practitioners and programme managers seeking to understand how attacker economics, AI and shifting risk priorities will affect day-to-day operations.
Participants will gain:
- Insights into why AI is rewriting both offensive and defensive playbooks
- A deeper understanding of how vulnerability data reflects shifts in attacker economics
- A view of what leading organisations are prioritising in 2025 to balance compliance, cost and resilience
- Practical lessons for layered security testing and boardroom conversations
Backed by fresh data from the 2025 Hacker-Powered Security Report from HackerOne attendees will uncovers how AI, attacker economics and evolving risk priorities are driving the biggest changes to security programmes in years.