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RSAC 2025: Agentic AI, Identity And The New Rules Of Cyber Defense

RSAC 2025: Agentic AI, Identity And The New Rules Of Cyber Defense

Forbes12-05-2025

Now that RSAC 2025 has wrapped, it's a good time to look at the top takeaways from the event—and what they mean for the future of cybersecurity.
This year's conference ended with a mix of urgency and cautious optimism. The theme, 'Many Voices. One Community,' reflected a core idea: cybersecurity is moving too fast for any one group to manage alone. The field now faces bigger attack surfaces, faster AI-driven threats and a new reality where identity—not the network—is the main point of defense.
Last year was about the promise of AI. This year focused on the reality: the need for accountability, automation and smarter adaptation. There's still plenty of buzz, but it's now grounded in practical progress.
AI was front and center again, but with a new focus: agentic AI. This type of AI doesn't just assist—it acts. These systems can reason and take steps without being told exactly what to do.
CrowdStrike introduced Charlotte AI Agentic Workflows and Response, aimed at automating detection and response tasks. Torq made a similar push by adding multi-agent RAG capabilities to its HyperSOC 2.0 platform after acquiring Revrod. The goal is to handle alerts and responses at machine speed—faster than humans can manage.
These changes are less about flashy tech and more about keeping up with threats that move in milliseconds.
As traditional perimeters fade, identity has taken over as the frontline of security. RSAC 2025 made it clear: identity is now both the starting point and last line of defense.
Proofpoint rolled out a platform that monitors access across email, endpoints, web and cloud. CrowdStrike introduced Falcon Privileged Access, designed to protect against identity-based attacks through every stage—from the initial breach to lateral movement.
The message was simple: if you can't manage identity at scale, you can't secure your environment.
Passwordless authentication has been on the radar for years. Now, it's finally gaining ground.
Passkeys, biometrics and adaptive authentication are catching on. Vendors at RSAC showed tools to help organizations shift away from passwords—especially in complex, hybrid environments. The push is clear: fewer passwords, fewer phishing risks and a smoother experience for users.
AI is helping us secure systems—but it's also being used by attackers. Organizations now face two challenges: how to use AI safely and how to protect against it.
Cyera launched Omni DLP, a smarter, AI-native approach to data loss prevention. Vanta shared a new AI security assessment tool to help teams evaluate how AI is being used and where it might introduce risks.
From fake media and AI-generated phishing to attacks that fool models, AI threats are growing. Many companies aren't ready yet and RSAC made it clear that preparation can't wait.
Seeing what's happening across cloud environments is still a problem. RSAC vendors showcased new tools aimed at fixing that.
Illumio introduced a cloud detection and response solution powered by AI. Rapid7 launched an enterprise-grade MDR service and a new Intelligence Hub to deliver context and insights in real time. These updates all pointed toward the same goal: make sense of complex environments and take action faster.
While much of the focus stays on outside attackers, RSAC 2025 brought attention back to insider risks.
DTEX shared new research on a troubling tactic: North Korean operatives getting hired under fake identities at global companies—sometimes with admin-level access. In a remote-first world, this kind of threat is hard to spot and harder to stop. The message? Trust, but verify—and then verify again.
Data protection often feels like a puzzle with missing pieces. This year, vendors tried to change that.
Snyk added dynamic application security testing to its platform. Cyera's data-first approach drew a lot of interest. NinjaOne launched tools that bring together patching and vulnerability management. These moves all aim to make data security easier to manage and more effective in practice.
Even as AI and quantum security grab headlines, old threats persist. Email remains a top attack vector.
Barracuda's new report found that nearly 25% of HTML attachments are malicious. Attackers are hiding dangerous content in files to dodge detection. It's a reminder that even mature tools like email still need attention.
Not everything at RSAC was serious. Torq drew a crowd with a 12,000-pound surprise—Grave Digger, the legendary monster truck. It was a playful break from the usual vendor booths and a reminder that cybersecurity events can still be fun.
RSAC 2025 showed us a field in the middle of transformation. The network perimeter is gone. Passwords are fading. AI is changing everything—from how we defend systems to how they're attacked.
Complexity is rising, but so is innovation. The next phase of cybersecurity will belong to those who can simplify, integrate and automate without losing visibility or control.
This year's message was clear: it's not about building walls. It's about preparing for a world without them.

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