-Content by CyberNewswire-
Fresh from a high-impact presence at RSAC 2025, where INE Security welcomed thousands of visitors to its interactive booth at San Francisco’s Moscone Center, the global cybersecurity training and certification provider is addressing some of the top cybersecurity priorities emerging from the industry-leading event.
As an exhibitor that engaged with both frontline practitioners and top-level decision makers, INE Security gained firsthand insights into organisations’ most pressing security challenges: the convergence of AI-driven threats, multi-cloud vulnerabilities, and increasingly sophisticated attack vectors.
Four days of packed session tracks and face-to-face discussions with industry leaders pointed to a clear reality: a large majority of ransomware victims lack effective response plans, and even more security professionals have doubts about their organisation’s readiness for zero-day attacks. INE Security is addressing how a comprehensive training platform directly addresses the five most critical security imperatives that dominated this year’s conference conversations.
Top 5 Cybersecurity Imperatives from RSAC 2025
AI Risk Management Becomes Business-Critical
AI security solutions dominated RSAC this year, signaling that as organisations adopt advanced response technologies, comprehensive training must keep pace. 72% of leaders report an increase in organisational cyber risks, with ransomware remaining a top concern, according to the World Economic Forum.
Organisations deploying AI tools and Large Language Models discover their systems vulnerable to sophisticated exploits that can manipulate AI behaviours, leading to data breaches and system compromises. This shift demands immediate security expertise to protect AI implementations.
LLM Vulnerabilities Expose Enterprise Data
Large Language Models (LLMs) emerged as a flashpoint at RSAC, sparking debates on the risks and merits. Despite the variety of strong opinions, what is clear is that LLMs are here to stay. They represent a new frontier for cyber threats, with critical vulnerabilities emerging from AI training data, model manipulation, and prompt injection attacks.
The cybersecurity community at RSAC 2025 identified this as one of the year’s most pressing concerns, with a large majority highlighting the advance of adversarial capabilities (such as phishing, malware development, and deep fakes) as their greatest concern regarding generative AI impact on cybersecurity.
Organisations must understand and defend against these AI-specific attack vectors to protect their digital assets, creating new specialised job titles such as AI Security Analyst.
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Multi-Cloud Environment Security Becomes Complex
Across domains, cloud remains top of mind for industry executives. As businesses adopt multiple cloud platforms, security analysts face new challenges in maintaining consistent security postures across diverse environments.
Research presented at RSAC 2025’s cloud security sessions by the Cloud Security Alliance found that although misconfigurations appear in a majority of real-world breaches, over 50% of organisations rate them as a low-to-moderate risk.
This gap highlights a growing disconnect between perceived and actual risk in cloud deployments. Researchers emphasised that IAM hygiene is essential, as are regular audits of the security systems in place.
Zero Trust Architecture Needs Proper Implementation
While zero trust principles are widely recognised as essential, implementing them effectively across modern IT environments proves challenging. The RSAC 2025 conference theme “Many Voices. One Community” emphasised the need for unified approaches to security, including zero trust implementation. According to Zscaler’s ThreatLabz 2025 VPN Risk Report discussed at the conference, 81% of organisations plan to implement zero trust strategies within the next 12 months.
Organisations struggle with identity management, access controls, and continuous verification across cloud services, remote workers, and interconnected systems, making it critical for companies to develop talent via cybersecurity certification programs.
Crisis Response Requires Comprehensive Preparedness
When cyber attacks succeed, organisations must maintain critical operations while containing threats. RSAC 2025 sessions on rapid incident response highlighted critical gaps in preparedness, while the Microsoft Digital Defence Report found 76% of organisations which suffered ransomware attacks in 2024 lacked an effective response plan.
The role of cybersecurity analyst has evolved to include crisis response capabilities, making effective training in incident management a critical skill. Real world scenario training, such as INE Security’s Skill Dive lab platform, helps build important muscle memory that becomes crucial during a crisis.
Addressing The Challenges
“After engaging with hundreds of cybersecurity leaders at our booth and participating in thought-provoking discussions throughout RSAC 2025, these five priorities clearly represent fundamental shifts in how organisations must approach cybersecurity,” said Dara Warn, CEO of INE Security. “The conversations we had with practitioners and executives alike confirmed that traditional security approaches cannot adequately address AI vulnerabilities, multi-cloud complexities, or the sophisticated response requirements of modern cyber attacks.”
INE Security provides practical solutions for each critical area:
- AI Security Fundamentals: Training on securing AI systems, understanding LLM vulnerabilities, and implementing AI-specific security controls
- Advanced Cloud Security: Hands-on experience managing multiple-cloud environments, implementing proper configurations, and maintaining security across distributed platforms
- Zero Trust Implementation: Practical guidance on designing and deploying zero trust architecture with proper access controls and verification systems
- Crisis Management Training: Realistic incident response scenarios that prepare teams to maintain operations while containing security breaches
- Continuous Skill Development: Access to 700+ courses and 50+ learning paths, and preparation for credentials from CompTIA Security+ to advanced professional certificates that help secure environments from modern threats
“The energy and insights we gathered at RSAC 2025 reinforced our conviction that the complexity of modern cybersecurity demands organisations invest in comprehensive cybersecurity training,” added Warn. “Our comprehensive training and cybersecurity certification platform ensures teams develop the expertise needed to address these challenges effectively.”
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