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Saturday, March 14, 2026

AI Agents Spark New Cyber Crisis for Businesses

AI agents are fueling a dangerous surge in cyberattacks, according to a new report from S-RM and FGS Global. Attackers are weaponizing automation to launch faster ransomware campaigns and craft personalized extortion threats.

The Core Problem: When companies deploy AI agents and automated workflows, they create "non-human identities" inside their systems—hidden automated accounts with broad access that are hard to monitor. If criminals breach these, they gain stealth access that security teams struggle to detect.

What Criminals Are Doing: Hackers now use AI to identify the most damaging data within networks and personalize extortion messages targeting executives. Established ransomware groups like Akira, Qilin, and Scattered Spider are expected to dominate attacks in 2026.

The Speed Problem: Attack cycles are getting faster. What previously took weeks now takes days or hours. Organizations face a "speed paradox"—they must communicate quickly with incomplete details or risk appearing paralyzed.

What You Must Do Now: If deploying AI agents, treat them as untrusted. Limit their system access, monitor continuously, and separate them from sensitive data. Boards must weigh efficiency gains against expanding cyber risks. More companies are paying ransoms than before, especially in manufacturing where production shutdowns cause immediate damage.

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