German businesses acknowledge the growing threat of hybrid cyberattacks but face significant challenges in practical preparedness while advancing strategic cybersecurity measures.
German businesses acknowledge the growing threat of hybrid cyberattacks but face significant challenges in practical preparedness while advancing strategic cybersecurity measures.
A Bitkom survey reveals that while the majority of German companies anticipate hybrid attacks, only a small fraction feel prepared, highlighting significant vulnerabilities in critical sectors like energy and finance.
German companies are preparing for stringent 2026 cybersecurity regulations by consolidating tools, improving identity management, and managing AI risks amid rising operational IT costs.
The NIS2 directive enforces urgent cybersecurity obligations on German companies, imposing strict deadlines and heavy penalties amid rising cyber threats.
German businesses confront ongoing cybercrime risks amid digital transformation efforts, emphasizing the need for enhanced employee training and supportive regulatory frameworks.
German companies are increasing investments in cybersecurity and AI-driven security, yet many face challenges in cyberresilience and backup protection.
German companies are adopting AI to improve cybersecurity but face challenges in governance, maturity, and resilience preparedness amid evolving cyber threats.
German companies face increasing risks from cyberattacks and AI in 2026, prompting new initiatives to enhance cybersecurity awareness and resilience especially among SMEs.
German companies in 2026 grapple with fraud via fake tax emails and must meet stringent new EU cybersecurity laws imposing personal liability and heavy penalties.
Hamburg's economy confronts rising cyber and hybrid threats fueled by AI risks and geopolitical tensions, urging enhanced security, regulatory compliance, and infrastructure investment.
AI is now the second biggest business risk worldwide in 2026, with German companies facing operational and compliance challenges in integrating AI agents effectively.
Germany and Israel have entered a new cyber and security partnership in 2026, featuring intensified collaboration on cybersecurity and a new German leadership role in regional security coordination.
AI-driven cyberattacks targeting business cloud and virtual environments are surging, urging companies to consolidate security tools and enforce stricter protection measures.
Companies in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern face high cybercrime risks with half already targeted, prompting calls for improved strategic preparedness amid wider German business risk management challenges.
Germany confronts intense year-end cybersecurity challenges from new regulations and cyber threats while law enforcement scores major wins against cybercrime.
German companies fortify digital resilience with intelligent supply chain workflows while confronting the critical 'LangGrinch' AI security vulnerability risking millions of API keys.
German companies in 2026 face escalating cyber threats and cloud vulnerabilities, prompting a strategic shift towards digital sovereignty and advanced resilience measures.
Around 40% of German companies are challenged by employees secretly using private AI tools, leading to data security risks and prompting calls for technical regulation strategies.
German companies encounter significant challenges in adopting AI, facing unclear costs, integration issues, and rising security risks linked to human factors and AI threats.
At the European Digital Sovereignty Summit, Germany and France outline strategies to reduce reliance on non-European technology, emphasizing secure, cooperative digital infrastructure.
German businesses face increasing AI-driven threats like phishing and jailbreaking, urging adoption of multi-layered security strategies and secure AI architectures to protect sensitive systems.
Sachsen-Anhalt businesses increase IT technology use in 2025 but remain below German national averages, with AI and cloud computing showing notable growth.
German companies emphasize digital sovereignty and AI investment while HessenFonds supports sustainable digital infrastructure projects, reflecting a robust national IT strategy.
Germany’s Bundestag has enacted the NIS-2 law to enhance nationwide cybersecurity by expanding regulations and strengthening governmental coordination.
New reports reveal Germany's tense cybersecurity status in 2025, spotlighting risks from unapproved AI use in public authorities and elevated threat perceptions among officials and citizens alike.
In 2025, German businesses face escalating cyberattacks causing nearly €289 billion in damages, with SMEs most affected and urgent calls for better cybersecurity culture and strategies.
A new report reveals German companies face major challenges with alert fatigue and manual remediation processes, threatening cybersecurity effectiveness amid AI-driven attacks.
German cybersecurity agency BSI warns that thousands of outdated Exchange servers pose GDPR compliance risks, affecting public institutions such as hospitals and schools.
IGEL's integration of Palo Alto Networks' secure Prisma Browser aims to strengthen endpoint security for hybrid workplaces, addressing growing remote work and cybersecurity challenges.
German companies face major hurdles in digital sovereignty and cybersecurity, with few having strategies and most lacking robust access controls, risking their competitiveness and security.
Tenable's report reveals major cloud security challenges for companies managing hybrid and multicloud environments, while Docker launches affordable hardened container images to boost security for SMEs.