يحاول ذهب - حر
Personal attack: AI makes identity theft easy
September 01, 2025
|Business Standard
India emerges as a key source of the cybercrime, prompting companies to strengthen their security systems and train employees, reports Avik Das
-
India has emerged as a key source of identity theft, a cybercrime that has surged in the last three years. Criminals, now armed with artificial intelligence and generative AI, are using sophisticated tools to blur the line between what's real and what's fake, making it harder than ever to protect personal information.
Employees of Indian companies have had their official emails or logins taken over by threat actors who use the information to attack other enterprises. The crime compounds the security challenges for companies, which also have to deal with ransomware, phishing and malware.
India is among the top 10 sources for identity takeovers, according to data provided by Proofpoint. "This is due to the use of botnets and account takeovers to issue attacks globally," said Sumit Dhawan, the company's chief executive officer (CEO), adding that "it has been quite phenomenal because India has never been a source for global attacks", referring to cybercrimes.
Increasing cases of identity theft have prompted banks, information technology and financial service companies to ensure robust threat defence mechanisms. It is difficult to say whether the people carrying out identity thefts are based in India but the impact is global. The crime often involves social engineering to create a sense of trust and urgency among an organisation's employees to click on a malicious link.
هذه القصة من طبعة September 01, 2025 من Business Standard.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Business Standard
Business Standard
Hard-hit SEZs thrown a lifeline
Tariff shield
2 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
Over ₹1 trillion for the nation's health
Biopharma Shakti initiative to tackle non-communicable diseases, turn India into global, innovation-led hub
3 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
Overseas individuals to get a bigger play
SIMPLIFYING CROSS-BORDER INVESTMENTS
1 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
Agri focus shifts to allied sector
Proposed initiatives aim at high-value agriculture, animal husbandry, women-led rural enterprises
3 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
How midcap stocks performed
EY India analyses the movement of stocks and the reasons behind it
1 min
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
Inside the fiscal consolidation numbers
RAISINA HILL
4 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
Budget lays blueprint for digital ecosystem
Budget 2026 is an intentional and ambitious one — From manufacturing growth to services supremacy, from technology consumption to AI-powered transformation.
2 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
States’ share of tax pool kept unchanged at 41%
Revenue deficit grants removed, states’ allocation linked to contribution to GDP
3 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
Share buybacks to be taxed as capital gains
To replace dividend tax; new SGB rule proposed
2 mins
February 02, 2026
Business Standard
Towards a healthier India
The Budget reflects a quiet but consequential shift: From viewing healthcare primarily as social infrastructure to recognising it as strategic national capability.
1 mins
February 02, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
