Cyber Security
GISEC Global 2025: A Place Where Innovation, Partnerships, and Leadership Come Together

Meriam ElOuazzani, the Senior Regional Director for META at SentinelOne, says, the company will showcase its latest developments in AI-powered security solutions, reinforcing its position as a leader in this area
What key messages or solutions are you highlighting at GISEC this year?
At GISEC 2025, we are focusing on the theme “Autonomous Cybersecurity: AI-Powered Resilience at Machine Speed.” This emphasizes our dedication to providing innovative, automated security solutions that enable organizations to proactively respond to changing cyber threats.
We will highlight our newest advancements in the Singularity Platform, including the introduction of Singularity Hyperautomation, which allows security teams to connect, automate, and streamline workflows without any coding required. Moreover, our AI SIEM for the Autonomous SOC will be showcased, recognized as the industry’s fastest AI-driven open platform capable of processing, detecting, and safeguarding enterprise environments on an exabyte scale. We will also present our Purple AI, the foremost AI security analyst, illustrating how it aids in early threat detection, rapid response, and maintaining a proactive stance against attacks through AI-fueled security intelligence.
How does GISEC help your company engage with the Middle Eastern cybersecurity market?
GISEC is a place where innovation, partnerships, and leadership come together. Our focus is not just on protection but on building resilience, helping businesses get ready for, withstand, and recover from cyberattacks while keeping their operations running smoothly. By being part of GISEC, we showcase our latest developments in AI-powered security solutions, reinforcing our position as a leader in this area.
We also connect with regional enterprises and governments. As the Middle East quickly adopts new technologies like AI and cloud services, cybersecurity has become essential for many organizations. GISEC provides a chance for us to engage with these groups and discuss how they can improve their security measures.
We also focus on educating and inspiring security leaders. Through expert sessions and live demonstrations, SentinelOne helps organizations understand how AI and automation can change the way they approach cybersecurity. This knowledge empowers them to create stronger security operations that can better handle the challenges of the digital world.
How would you describe the current cybersecurity threat landscape in the Middle East?
This year, a major cybersecurity challenge in the Middle East is the merging of AI-driven threats, the rise of ransomware, and vulnerabilities associated with third parties, all taking place within a context of rapid digital transformation. As companies adopt cloud technologies, IoT, and AI to facilitate innovation, their potential exposure to attacks is growing quickly, often outstripping their capacity to protect themselves. The threat actors in the region are evolving, using automation, AI, and weaknesses in supply chains to execute quicker and more complex attacks.
What are the most pressing cyber threats facing businesses in the region today?
In 2025, businesses in the Middle East, particularly in the UAE, are contending with a rapidly evolving cyber threat landscape. Ransomware remains a significant threat, with attackers employing advanced tactics to target critical sectors such as finance, healthcare, and energy. The emergence of Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) platforms has lowered the barrier to entry for cybercriminals, leading to increased attack frequency and sophistication.
The proliferation of generative AI tools has enabled the creation of convincing phishing campaigns. These attacks often impersonate trusted entities, making it challenging for individuals to discern malicious communications. Organizations are implementing advanced AI-powered detection systems and enhancing employee training to mitigate these risks.
Additionally, malicious or inadvertent insider threats pose a significant risk to organizations. Attackers can exploit supply chain vulnerabilities to gain unauthorized access to systems. Businesses are adopting zero-trust architectures and conducting thorough assessments of third-party vendors to enhance security.
How do cultural or regulatory differences impact cybersecurity strategies in the Middle East compared to other regions?
Culturally, there is a strong emphasis on data sovereignty, privacy, and national security. Organizations are highly sensitive to where their data is stored and who has access to it, leading to a preference for localized data centers and on-premises security solutions in sectors like government, finance, and energy. Trust and relationship-building are also critical in business engagements, meaning that cybersecurity partnerships often hinge on technology, credibility, transparency, and long-term commitment.
From a regulatory perspective, countries like the UAE and Saudi Arabia have introduced robust national cybersecurity frameworks and sector-specific regulations, such as the UAE’s Information Assurance Standards and Saudi Arabia’s Essential Cybersecurity Controls (ECC). These mandates often require higher compliance rigor than some international standards, with specific provisions for critical infrastructure protection, cloud usage, and breach reporting timelines.
As a result, cybersecurity strategies in the Middle East must be highly adaptive, balancing global best practices with regional regulations, ensuring data localization, and respecting local cultural nuances in risk management, governance, and incident response planning.
How do your company’s products and services address the specific threats faced by regional businesses?
SentinelOne’s products and services are uniquely designed to address the specific cybersecurity threats regional businesses face in the Middle East, where the stakes are exceptionally high across sectors like finance, energy, healthcare, and government.
Understanding the importance of data sovereignty and compliance with regional regulations, SentinelOne provides flexible deployment options, including on-premises solutions, to meet the specific needs of Middle Eastern enterprises. This adaptability ensures that organizations can have control over their data while benefiting from advanced security measures.
Our Singularity Platform delivers AI-powered, autonomous protection across endpoints, cloud, identity, and data, enabling organizations to detect, respond, and recover from threats at machine speed. With threats such as ransomware, supply chain attacks, and phishing campaigns becoming more sophisticated, our platform ensures real-time defense without operational disruption. We also address the growing shift to the cloud with Singularity Cloud Security, providing real-time protection for VMs, containers, and Kubernetes environments, aligned with the region’s agility, compliance, and data sovereignty needs.
To counter the rise of AI-driven and nation-state attacks, our AI SIEM for the Autonomous SOC delivers exabyte-scale ingestion and lightning-fast detection, providing unmatched visibility and threat intelligence across enterprise environments. Singularity Hyperautomation enables organizations to automate SecOps workflows without coding, drastically improving response times and reducing alert fatigue.
Finally, Purple AI empowers security teams with natural language-driven threat hunting and contextual investigations, dramatically enhancing human capability and operational resilience. Through this unified and autonomous approach, SentinelOne ensures regional businesses can stay protected, compliant, and resilient in today’s AI-powered threat landscape.
What advice would you give to regional businesses looking to strengthen their cybersecurity posture in 2025?
Focus on building resilience, not just defense. The threat landscape in the Middle East is evolving rapidly, driven by AI-powered attacks, ransomware escalation, and supply chain vulnerabilities. It’s no longer enough to rely on traditional perimeter defenses. Businesses must adopt a proactive, intelligence-driven approach that combines prevention, detection, response, and recovery into a unified strategy.
Invest in AI-powered security platforms that provide real-time visibility across endpoints, cloud, identity, and network layers. Automation and hyperautomation will be crucial to manage alert fatigue, speed up response times, and enable the security operations center (SOC) to scale effectively.
Equally important, embed cybersecurity into your business culture, train employees, establish clear incident response plans, and align cybersecurity initiatives with business objectives. Engage with frameworks like NIST or ISO 27001 and stay informed about evolving regional compliance requirements. Lastly, partner with trusted cybersecurity providers who know the region’s unique challenges around data sovereignty, regulatory expectations, and operational resilience. Cybersecurity is no longer just an IT responsibility, it’s a fundamental pillar of sustainable business growth in 2025 and beyond.
Cyber Security
Positive Technologies Reports 80% of Middle East Cyberattacks Compromise Confidential Data

A new study by cybersecurity firm Positive Technologies has shed light on the evolving cyber threat landscape in the Middle East, revealing that a staggering 80% of successful cyberattacks in the region lead to the breach of confidential information. The research, examining the impact of digital transformation, organized cybercrime, and the underground market, highlights the increasing exposure of Middle Eastern nations to sophisticated cyber threats.
The study found that one in three successful cyberattacks were attributed to Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) groups, which predominantly target government institutions and critical infrastructure. While the rapid adoption of new IT solutions is driving efficiency, it simultaneously expands the attack surface for malicious actors.
Cybercriminals in the region heavily utilize social engineering tactics (61% of cases) and malware (51%), often employing a combination of both. Remote Access Trojans (RATs) emerged as a primary weapon in 27% of malware-based attacks, indicating a common objective of gaining long-term access to compromised systems.
The analysis revealed that credentials and trade secrets (29% each) were the most sought-after data, followed by personal information (20%). This stolen data is frequently leveraged for blackmail or sold on the dark web. Beyond data theft, 38% of attacks resulted in the disruption of core business operations, posing significant risks to critical sectors like healthcare, transportation, and government services.
APT groups are identified as the most formidable threat actors due to their substantial resources and advanced technical capabilities. In 2024, they accounted for 32% of recorded attacks, with a clear focus on government and critical infrastructure. Their activities often extend beyond traditional cybercrime, encompassing cyberespionage and even cyberwarfare aimed at undermining trust and demonstrating digital dominance.
Dark web analysis further revealed that government organizations were the most frequently mentioned targets (34%), followed by the industrial sector (20%). Hacktivist activity was also prominent, with ideologically motivated actors often sharing stolen databases freely, exacerbating the cybercrime landscape.
The United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Israel, and Qatar, all leaders in digital transformation, were the most frequently cited countries on the dark web in connection with stolen data. Experts suggest that the prevalence of advertisements for selling data from these nations underscores the challenges of securing rapidly expanding digital environments, which cybercriminals are quick to exploit.
Positive Technologies analyst Alexey Lukash said, “In the near future, we expect cyberthreats in the Middle East to grow both in scale and sophistication. As digital transformation efforts expand, so does the attack surface, creating more opportunities for hackers of all skill levels. Governments in the region need to focus on protecting critical infrastructure, financial institutions, and government systems. The consequences of successful attacks in these areas could have far-reaching implications for national security and sovereignty.”
To help organizations build stronger defenses against cyberthreats, Positive Technologies recommends implementing modern security measures. These include vulnerability management systems to automate asset management, as well as identify, prioritize, and remediate vulnerabilities. Positive Technologies also suggests using network traffic analysis tools to monitor network activity and detect cyberattacks. Another critical layer of protection involves securing applications. Such solutions are designed to identify vulnerabilities in applications, detect suspicious activity, and take immediate action to prevent attacks.
Positive Technologies emphasizes the need for a comprehensive, result-driven approach to cybersecurity. This strategy is designed to prevent attackers from disrupting critical business processes. Scalable and flexible, it can be tailored to individual organizations, entire industries, or even large-scale digital ecosystems like nations or international alliances. The goal is to deliver clear, measurable results in cybersecurity—not just to meet compliance standards or rely on isolated technical fixes.
Cyber Security
Axis Communications Sheds Light on Video Surveillance Industry Perspectives on AI

Axis Communications has published a new report that explores the state of AI in the global video surveillance industry. Titled The State of AI in Video Surveillance, the report examines the key opportunities, challenges and future trends, as well as the responsible practices that are becoming critical for organisations in their use of AI. The report draws insights from qualitative research as well as quantitative data sources, including in-depth interviews with carefully selected experts from the Axis global partner network.
A leading insight featured in the report is the unanimous view among interviewees that interest in the technology has surged over the past few years, with more and more business customers becoming curious and increasingly knowledgeable about its potential applications.

Mats Thulin, Director AI & Analytics Solutions at Axis Communications
“AI is a technology that has the potential to touch every corner and every function of the modern enterprise. That said, any implementations or integrations that aim to drive value come with serious financial and ethical considerations. These considerations should prompt organisations to scrutinise any initiative or investment. Axis’s new report not only shows how AI is transforming the video surveillance landscape, but also how that transformation should ideally be approached,” said Mats Thulin, Director AI & Analytics Solutions at Axis Communications.
According to the Axis report, the move by businesses from on-premise security server systems to hybrid cloud architectures continues at pace, driven by the need for faster processing, improved bandwidth usage and greater scalability. At the same time, cloud-based technology is being combined with edge AI solutions, which play a crucial role by enabling faster, local analytics with minimal latency, a prerequisite for real-time responsiveness in security-related situations.
By moving AI processing closer to the source using edge devices such as cameras, businesses can reduce bandwidth consumption and better support real-time applications like security monitoring. As a result, the hybrid approach is expected to continue to shape the role of AI in security and unlock new business intelligence and operational efficiencies.
A trend that is emerging among businesses is the integration of diverse data for a more comprehensive analysis, transforming safety and security. Experts predict that by integrating additional sensory data, such as audio and contextual environmental factors caught on camera, can lead to enhanced situational awareness and greater actionable insights, offering a more comprehensive understanding of events.
Combining multiple data streams can ultimately lead to improved detection and prediction of potential threats or incidents. For example, in emergency scenarios, pairing visual data with audio analysis can enable security teams to respond more quickly and precisely. This context-aware approach can potentially elevate safety, security and operational efficiency, and reflects how system operators can leverage and process multiple data inputs to make better-informed decisions.
According to the Axis report, interviewees emphasised that responsible AI and ethical considerations are critical priorities in the development and deployment of new systems, raising concerns about decisions potentially based on biased or unreliable AI. Other risks highlighted include those related to privacy violations and how facial and behavioural recognition could have ethical and legal repercussions.
As a result, a recurring theme among interviewees was the importance of embedding responsible AI practices early in the development process. Interviewees also pointed to regulatory frameworks, such as the EU AI Act, as pivotal in shaping responsible use of technology, particularly in high-risk areas. While regulation was broadly acknowledged as necessary to build trust and accountability, several interviewees also stressed the need for balance to safeguard innovation and address privacy and data security concerns.
“The findings of this report reflect how enterprises are viewing the trend of AI holistically, working to have a firm grasp of both how to use the technology effectively and understand the macro implications of its usage. Conversations surrounding privacy and responsibility will continue but so will the pace of innovation and the adoption of technologies that advance the video surveillance industry and lead to new and exciting possibilities,” Thulin added.
Artificial Intelligence
CyberKnight Partners with Ridge Security for AI-Powered Security Validation

The automated penetration testing market was valued at roughly $3.1 billion in 2023 and is projected to grow rapidly, with forecasts estimating a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) between 21% and 25%. By 2030, the sector is expected to reach approximately $9 to $10 billion. The broader penetration testing industry is also expanding, with projections indicating it will surpass $5.3 billion by 2027, according to MarketandMarket.
To support enterprises and government entities across the Middle East, Turkey and Africa (META) with identifying and validating vulnerabilities and reducing security gaps in real-time, CyberKnight has partnered with Ridge Security, the World’s First Al-powered Offensive Security Validation Platform. Ridge Security’s products incorporate advanced artificial intelligence to deliver security validation through automated penetration testing and breach and attack simulations.
RidgeBot uses advanced AI to autonomously perform multi-vector iterative attacks, conduct continuous penetration testing, and validate vulnerabilities with zero false positives. RidgeBot has been deployed by customers worldwide as a key element of their journey to evolve from traditional vulnerability management to Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM).
“Ridge Security’s core strength lies in delivering holistic, AI-driven security validation that enables organizations to proactively manage risk and improve operational performance,” said Hom Bahmanyar, Chief Enablement Officer at Ridge Security. “We are delighted to partner with CyberKnight to leverage their network of strategic partners, deep-rooted customer relations, and security expertise to accelerate our expansion plans in the region.”
“Our partnership with Ridge Security is a timely and strategic step, as 69% of organizations are now adopting AI-driven security for threat detection and prevention,” added Wael Jaber, Chief Strategy Officer at CyberKnight. “By joining forces, we enhance our ability to deliver automated, intelligent security validation solutions, reaffirming our commitment to empowering customers with resilient, future-ready cybersecurity across the region.”
-
GISEC1 week ago
Positive Technologies @ GISEC Global 2025: Demonstrating Cutting-Edge Cyber Threats and AI Defense Strategies
-
Cyber Security1 week ago
Axis Communications Sheds Light on Video Surveillance Industry Perspectives on AI
-
GISEC1 week ago
ManageEngine @ GISEC Global 2025: AI, Quantum Computing, and Ransomware Form Part of Cybersecurity Outlook for 2025
-
Africa Focus1 week ago
CyberKnight Sets Up South Africa Entity
-
Cyber Security6 days ago
Positive Technologies Reports 80% of Middle East Cyberattacks Compromise Confidential Data
-
GISEC1 week ago
Group-IB @ GISEC Global 2025: Tackling Evolving Cyber Threats with Localised Intelligence and AI
-
News1 week ago
ManageEngine Enhances PAM with Native Intelligence
-
Channel Talk6 days ago
Qualys Partners with Teksalah, the First Middle Eastern MSP in its mROC Alliance