Keeper Security has published a new insights report, “Identity, AI and Zero Trust: Cybersecurity Perspectives from Infosecurity Europe, Black Hat USA and it-sa.” The report captures perspectives from more than 370 cybersecurity professionals across three major industry events, Infosecurity Europe in London, Black Hat USA in Las Vegas, and it-sa in Nuremberg, highlighting how security teams are evolving to navigate today’s increasingly complex threat landscape.
Key Insights from Real Professionals: Identity, AI and Zero Trust
Professionals across the United States, United Kingdom and Germany agreed that Artificial Intelligence (AI) is reshaping cybersecurity on both sides of the battlefield. Only 12% of respondents in the UK and 16% in the United States said their organizations are fully prepared to handle AI-enhanced attacks. In Germany, confidence was higher at 28%, but most respondents acknowledged that preparedness remains a work in progress.
Zero trust was universally recognized as critical to a modern defense strategy, yet implementation continues to trail intent. At Infosecurity Europe, 18% of respondents reported fully implemented zero-trust frameworks. That figure rose to 27% at Black Hat USA and 44% at it-sa in Germany, reflecting stronger progress but underscoring that adoption remains uneven across regions.
The data also reinforces identity-based attacks as the leading global concern. Half of UK respondents identified phishing as the top identity-based threat, with 42% reporting deepfakes as the leading threat. In the United States, 45% cited phishing as their greatest risk, followed by 41% who pointed to deepfakes. Concern peaked in Germany, where 61% of respondents identified deepfakes as the most significant identity-based threat.
Across all regions, privileged access controls were found to be inconsistent. In the UK, 43% said Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) is not consistently enforced for privileged accounts. In the U.S., 40% reported the same, while in Germany, half of the respondents said their organizations lack a dedicated PAM solution altogether.
From Awareness to Action
The results reveal that security leaders are aligned on strategy but struggle with execution. Awareness of zero trust, PAM and AI-driven security principles is high, yet complexity, resource constraints and competing priorities continue to delay deployment.
“Identity has become the control point of cybersecurity,” said Darren Guccione, CEO and Co-founder, Keeper Security. “Our data demonstrates that the disparity between cybersecurity awareness and action is wide, but positive, proactive defense can close this gap. The organizations that lead in zero trust and PAM are not only protecting access but building the foundation for secure, scalable growth in the age of AI.”
Keeper’s research emphasizes that true resilience now depends on disciplined execution, measurable progress and the responsible use of AI to detect anomalies and manage risk across every access point.
To explore the complete findings, including regional comparisons and practical recommendations, download the full Identity, AI and Zero Trust report here.
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