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AI-Driven Cyberattacks: Are You Ready? 

Traditional Cyber Awareness Is No Longer Enough. Here's What Regulated Firms Need to Do Now. 

Every October, cybersecurity companies rally around awareness month by pushing out toolkits, posters, and tipsheets to help employees avoid clicking on malicious links or using “123456” as a password. But in 2025, that message feels worryingly outdated. 

This year, the threat landscape has changed dramatically. And the biggest reason? AI. 

AI is not just powering innovation; it’s also supercharging cybercriminals. At FoxTech, we’ve been tracking how generative AI is accelerating phishing sophistication, deepfake precision, and even the automation of reconnaissance and exploitation. What we’re seeing in the wild is no longer amateur hour. It’s industrialised, AI-assisted cybercrime. 

And it’s targeting regulated firms with precision. 

If you work in financial services or professional services, you’re already on high alert due to your regulatory obligations. But the uncomfortable truth is this: most awareness programmes haven’t kept up. They rely on outmoded models that treat human error as a simple training issue, when in fact, it’s now being actively manipulated by machine learning. 

Want to dive deeper Cyber Governance Code of Practice?

Read our previous blog to find out more

From "Don't Click That" to "You Can't Spot This"

In our recent webinar, New Rules, New Risks, we discussed how the UK’s latest codes of practice – particularly the Cyber Governance Code and Software Security Code – are quietly but decisively raising the bar. These voluntary frameworks reflect a growing reality: boards are now accountable for cyber resilience. And AI-driven threats are accelerating that shift. 

For regulated firms, this means the classic awareness poster in the kitchen is no longer a viable defence strategy. The attack surface is now behavioural. It’s dynamic. And it changes as fast as the models that drive it. 

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So What Should Firms Do Now?

1. Move from Annual Training to Continuous Human Risk Management

You can’t train your way out of a dynamic threat landscape. Instead, firms should combine frequent, microlearning-based training with continuous behavioural risk monitoring. That means moving beyond one-size-fits-all training to smaller, scenario-based modules delivered throughout the year. At the same time, firms should implement ongoing measurement of risky behaviours, with proactive interventions such as SOC-led behavioural monitoring, adaptive awareness nudges, or user risk segmentation to ensure a dynamic, responsive defence. 

2. Treat AI as a Threat Vector in Governance Frameworks

AI isn’t just a tool you can adopt; it’s a capability your adversaries are already using. Regulated firms should update risk registers and governance frameworks to account for AI-generated threats. This includes deepfakes, synthetic identity fraud, and hyper-personalised spear phishing. 

3. Stop Equating Compliance with Security

Being audit-ready is not the same as being breach-ready. The DSIT Codes of Practice rightly emphasise board accountability, asset-level risk assessment, and continuous validation. Cybersecurity must now sit alongside financial and operational risk as a top-tier governance concern. 

Final Thought

Traditional awareness efforts have their place, but in a world of AI-powered adversaries, they simply don’t go far enough. The smartest firms we work with are shifting from “awareness” to resilience. That means integrating human behaviour analytics, AI-risk modelling, and regulator-aligned controls that move faster than the threats themselves. 

The question is no longer “Are our staff trained?” but rather: 

“Are we equipped to defend against attacks that learn faster than we do?” 

If you’re reviewing your current cyber strategy or preparing for an audit, we can help. Our regulatory-grade penetration testing, human-driven SOC, and executive risk advisory services are designed for exactly this moment. 

Let’s have a conversation. 

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