US
We've curated 455 cybersecurity statistics about the US to help you understand how emerging threats, like state-sponsored attacks and ransomware, are reshaping our defenses and practices in 2025.
Showing 281-300 of 455 results
28% of campus leaders say physical and digital security still operate in silos on their campus.
54% of CISOs lack standardized, business-relevant metrics.
78% of U.S. CISOs expect AI to create a moderate or significant amount of new IT or security work for their teams due to AI-related security risks and vulnerabilities.
17% of CISOs say they always feel personally blamed for security incidents, regardless of the root cause.
37% of campus leaders say fraudulent enrollments are declining.
71% of campus leaders say outdated security technology puts student safety at risk.
58% of CISOs say incidents occurred even though their security tools were in place.
44% of CISOs rank board or executive expectations as their number-one stressor.
78% of CISOs lack a formal strategy for handling AI identities in a zero trust security architecture in 2025.
90% of CISOs say their role may be at risk to some degree if a breach were to occur.
59% of CISOs cite agentic AI as their leading near-term threat.
82% of CISOs say they are under pressure from executives or boards to reduce staff using AI.
50% of higher education institutions are monitoring transactions in real-time to combat fraud.
39% of CISOs say they often feel blamed, even when incidents fall outside their direct control.
57% of CISOs report that half or fewer of their security tools deliver measurable Return on Investment (ROI).
82% of CISOs feel confident quantifying risk.
35% of campus leaders say fraudulent enrollments are rising.
CISO confusion about cyber insurance policy coverage for supply-chain attacks decreased from 58% in 2024 to 43% in 2025.
40% of CISOs considered leaving their role altogether.
Two-thirds of CISOs report feeling burned out weekly or daily.