AI changes the pace, but not fundamentals
As organizations move quickly to adopt AI, security leaders are facing a familiar challenge in a new form: how to innovate at speed without increasing risk. At Microsoft Ignite, we sat down with our partners at IBM to talk candidly about what Secure by Design looks like in practice, and why it’s becoming a foundational expectation beyond its previous buzzword status.
This conversation is about how organizations need to change their mindset, culture, and the real-world tradeoffs security and business leaders are navigating as AI becomes embedded across the enterprise. All of which stems from IBM’s Institute for Business value’s most recent paper Secure by design, smarter with AI.
AI is already reshaping how both defenders and adversaries operate. While some headlines focus on novelty or worst-case scenarios, the reality is more grounded: attackers are accelerating familiar techniques, not reinventing the game overnight.
That shift in speed is an important factor. It puts pressure on organizations to move from reactive security models toward approaches that emphasize resilience, prioritization, and preparedness from the very start. As IBM's Institute for Business Value highlighted, this remains a cat-and-mouse problem, but one where response time, visibility, and architectural decisions increasingly determine outcomes.
“AI doesn’t fundamentally change the fact that security is a cat-and-mouse game, but it does make that game move much faster,” said Srini Tummalapenta, co-author of the new paper and Distinguished Engineer & CTO IBM Security Services.
Follow Microsoft Security