AI
We've curated 1475 cybersecurity statistics about AI to help you understand how machine learning algorithms, automated threat detection, and AI-driven defenses are shaping the landscape of cybersecurity in 2025.
Showing 641-660 of 1475 results
43% of employees use external AI tools paid for by the company.
28% of employees admit they would use AI at work even if it were banned.
Only 20% of employees surveyed say AI was used in their onboarding process.
82% of employees are either “very” or “somewhat” confident about accurate and satisfactory outputs from AI.
Only 15% of employees say they are “not very” or “not at all” confident about accurate and satisfactory outputs from AI.
84% of managers acknowledge some level of AI use among their teams.
60% of employees rely on free AI platforms.
Just 36% of companies indicate they have a formal AI policy in place.
Only 41% of employees inform their manager or seek permission before using AI.
Only 22% of US full-time desk workers with a bachelor’s degree or higher, who have used AI for work in the past 12 months, report that their employer actively monitors their AI usage.
24% of employees use internally developed AI platforms.
The large majority (68%) of employees report regularly finding errors with AI technology.
The highest industry adopters of AI in human resources are in wholesale trade (33%) and restaurants, travel, and lodging (25%).
73% of business executives warn that failing to adopt agentic AI could pose a competitive risk.
Only 43% of organizations have implemented AI-based cybersecurity measures.
Just 36% of businesses have the infrastructure to support GenAI.
In 2025, only 36% of organizations feel confident in their ability to support large-scale genAI workloads and data volumes.
73% of business executives view agentic AI as critical to staying competitive.
82% of innovation leaders are already allocating more than 6% of their IT budgets to genAI-enabled data management.
78% of all organizations intend to increase their genAI spend.