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    Home»Mobile»The AI arms race: Inside the invisible war between hackers and defenders
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    The AI arms race: Inside the invisible war between hackers and defenders

    techupdateadminBy techupdateadminDecember 10, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Artificial intelligence has become both the weapon and the shield in today’s cyber battlefield. From self-learning malware to adaptive firewalls, AI is reshaping the balance of power between attackers and defenders. What was once a contest of code evolved into an invisible arms race of algorithms, where milliseconds can decide the fate of entire systems.

    A recent study in the Premier Journal of Science, a Scopus indexed journal, by Sunish Vengathattil, Senior Director of Software Engineering at Clarivate Analytics, and Shamnad Shaffi, Data Architect at Amazon Web Services, captures this transformation. Their paper, “Advanced Network Security Through Predictive Intelligence: Machine Learning Approaches for Proactive Threat Detection” (DOI: 10.70389/PJS.100155), shows how predictive intelligence is replacing the old “detect and react” model with AI-driven anticipation.

    Using large-scale datasets such as CICIDS2017 and UNSW-NB15, the researchers trained machine learning models to detect early warning signals of cyberattacks. The results were striking. Random Forest and SVM models improved zero-day attack detection from 55% to 85 percent, reduced false negatives by 40 percent, and achieved real-time response speeds of under 10 milliseconds. These models analyzed behaviors rather than just signatures, identifying unusual network activity or insider misuse before an incident could escalate.

    Sunish Vengathattil / Sunish Vengathattil

    Sunish Vengathattil is a recognized leader in AI, cloud, and cybersecurity innovation. With nearly two decades of experience driving AI/ML digital transformation and research, he has authored multiple peer-reviewed studies on AI ethics, predictive intelligence, and digital innovation. In 2025, he was named Digital Transformation Executive of the Year (Platinum) by the Titan Business Awards for his leadership in advancing intelligent systems and ethical AI practices.

    “The traditional approach to cybersecurity is like trying to catch lightning with a net,” says Sunish Vengathattil. “Predictive intelligence lets us anticipate where the lightning will strike next. It’s not reaction, it’s foresight.”

    The study also shows how machine learning could have mitigated real-world disasters. In each of these cases, attackers exploited delayed detection. Predictive intelligence, by correlating anomalies across millions of signals, could have identified these indicators before the damage occurred.

    However, the growing reliance on AI for defense also introduces new vulnerabilities. The same technology that enables proactive protection can be misused when applied without ethical oversight. This intersection of cyber defense and moral governance was explored by the same authors in their IEEE paper, “Ethical Implications of AI-Powered Decision Support Systems in Organizations.”(DOI: 10.1109/ICAIDE65466.2025.11189693)

    That paper highlights an emerging threat: AI-driven decision systems themselves can become attack targets. As organizations automate decisions related to fraud detection, access control, and risk scoring, the risk of biased or manipulated algorithms increases. “An AI that decides who to trust, who to block, or what to flag can itself be weaponized,” Vengathattil explains. “A compromised model isn’t just a system failure; it’s an ethical one.”

    The study warns of issues such as algorithmic bias, lack of transparency in decision-making, and misuse of data that can erode confidence in AI-driven defense systems. A hacker could poison training data to distort an AI model’s judgment, effectively turning a defense tool into a vulnerability. Overcollection of personal data for training also raises privacy and regulatory concerns, creating new security gaps in the process.

    To address these risks, the authors call for governance frameworks based on Fairness, Accountability, Transparency, and Privacy (FATP). They recommend tools such as Explainable AI (XAI), algorithmic auditing, and human oversight to ensure that AI-driven security remains both ethical and effective.

    Together, these studies reveal the dual nature of AI in cybersecurity. Predictive intelligence empowers defenders to think ahead of hackers, but it also demands a new kind of vigilance that blends technological skill with ethical responsibility. The AI arms race is not only about speed or innovation. It is also about integrity. “The future of cybersecurity,” says Vengathattil, “will depend not just on how smart our systems are, but on how responsibly we build them. We must design AI that defends without deceiving.”

    Digital Trends partners with external contributors. All contributor content is reviewed by the Digital Trends editorial staff.

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