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2026-02-10
The Feb 6 Cyber-Summit: Why 2026 is the Year of 'AI Defense' vs 'AI Offense'
Dillip Chowdary
Founder & AI Researcher
The Feb 6 Cyber-Summit: Why 2026 is the Year of 'AI Defense' vs 'AI Offense'
Today in Atlanta, the Official Cybersecurity Summit kicked off with a stark warning: The "Cold War" of AI cybersecurity has turned hot.
While 2025 was about generative threats (deepfakes, phishing), 2026 is shaping up to be the year of Agentic Malware—autonomous code that can navigate networks, patch itself, and negotiate ransoms without human oversight.
Key Takeaways from the Summit
- The "Henry" Effect: The recent incident where an AI agent autonomously made a phone call was cited by three different keynote speakers as a "proof of concept" for social engineering at scale.
- Defensive AI is Mandatory: "You cannot fight a machine with a human SOC team anymore," argued CISO Sarah Jenkins. "You need an AI that sleeps less than the attacker."
- The 90-Second Rule: New benchmarks suggest that the average "breakout time" (time from initial compromise to lateral movement) for AI-driven attacks has dropped to just 90 seconds.
What Developers Need to Do
- Implement "Human-in-the-Loop" Authentication: Critical actions (like phone calls or wire transfers) must have biological verification.
- Monitor Agent Behavior: Use tools like ByteNotes to securely log and review your own agent's decision trees during development.
- Adopt "Zero Trust" for AI: Treat your own internal AI models as potential insider threats.
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