Two-Thirds of Indian Digital Trust Professionals Expect AI Driven Cyber Threats and Deepfakes Will Keep Them Up at Night

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Summary

The 2026 Tech Trends & Priorities Pulse Poll finds regulatory compliance, business continuity and resilience, and workforce upskilling in data security are top focus areas for 2026 for tech pros in India.

Press Release

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ISACA, the leading global professional association dedicated to advancing careers in digital trust, unveiled its 2026 Tech Trends & Priorities Pulse Poll highlighting the top challenges and focus areas shaping the technology and cybersecurity landscape for the year ahead.

 

As per the report, AI-driven cyber threats and deepfakes (67 percent) have emerged as the top concerns that digital trust professionals in India expect will keep them up at night in 2026. This is followed by thoughts of irreparable harm caused by failure to detect/respond to a breach (44 percent) and keeping pace with technological change (39 percent).

 

AI looming large    

 

The report, based on survey responses from 2,963 professionals globally across cybersecurity, IT audit, governance, risk, and compliance functions, including  212 respondents from India, also reveals that 50 percent of Indian tech pros consider keeping up with the pace of AI-driven change as their biggest professional concern going into 2026, followed by increasing complexity of threats at 31 percent, and talent retention and hiring at 26 percent. AI and machine learning (65 percent) and generative AI and large language models (LLMs) (56 percent) also dominate the top technology trends or priorities that respondents from India anticipate will impact their work in 2026, along with data privacy and sovereignty (43 percent) and cloud security (35 percent).

 

However, only 22 percent of respondents indicate that their organizations are very prepared to manage the risks associated with generative AI solutions in the coming year, with 43 percent feeling somewhat prepared and 25 percent saying they are not very or not at all  prepared.

 

AI is also expected to dominate cybersecurity threats, with AI-driven social engineering (75 percent) topping the list, followed by ransomware and extortion attacks (52 percent), and insider threats – intentional or accidental (38 percent).

 

“While it can sometimes feel daunting, it is imperative to approach AI not merely as a challenge but as an opportunity to harness its potential for positive impact,” says Pablo Ballarin, founder, Balusian S.L., and member of the ISACA Emerging Trends Working Group. “By enhancing our expertise and strategies, digital trust professionals can ensure resilience, uphold the integrity of digital systems, and foster trust across all digital platforms.”

Navigating a complex regulatory environment, hiring challenges

With regulatory complexity and global compliance risks (36 percent) also expected to keep digital trust professionals in India up at night next year, professionals are bracing for a more demanding compliance environment. Yet, 89 percent of Indian respondents believe cyber-related regulations will drive business growth, and 91 percent say they will strengthen digital trust over the next few years.