Cybersecurity Awareness Month: Identity, AI, and the Future of Your Cyber Defense

Join OpenText on LinkedIn and X for White Hat Hacker Wars fun throughout the month of October.

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Grayson Milbourne

October 02, 20254 min read

The cyber crime ecosystem has changed dramatically in just a few years. Threat actors are moving faster, collaborating more effectively, and exploiting AI advancements to launch attacks at a scale never seen before. From sophisticated social engineering schemes and business email compromise to supply chain disruptions and an endless stream of vulnerabilities, today’s attackers have the upper hand more often than defenders would like to admit.

Why cyber defense is struggling to keep up

Many organizations are finding it harder than ever to keep pace. Security tools can be tough to deploy and integrate across complex environments, and if they’re not fine-tuned, they often generate more noise than insight. The result is alert overload, burned-out analysts, and a higher risk of missed threats, slow responses, and costly breaches.

To stay ahead, organizations must rethink how they approach defense. Adding more point solutions only adds complexity. True resilience comes from security layers that communicate with one another, sharing intelligence, correlating events, and surfacing meaningful alerts. This integrated approach not only strengthens visibility but also accelerates response and makes defenses more effective.

Why culture matters as much as technology

But cyber resilience isn’t just about technology, it’s also cultural. It requires an organizational mindset that acknowledges the risks and actively engages everyone, from the C-suite to the newest hire, in the defense of information. Building awareness, fostering accountability, and continuously adapting are just as critical as deploying the latest tools.

Cybersecurity Awareness Month is the ideal time for organizations to pause and reflect:

  • Are solutions properly integrated?
  • Do response playbooks exist and get practiced?
  • Is awareness part of the company culture or just a checkbox exercise?

Taking stock at least once a year can make a measurable difference in resilience.

Four ways to reduce risk and improve cyber resilience

1. Start with identity.
 Identity has become the new perimeter in a world where AI-driven agents are expected to outnumber humans 100 to 1 in the coming years. Strong identity and access management is no longer optional, it’s the critical foundation layer of every security strategy.

2. Integrate your security tools.
 A collection of disconnected point solutions creates more noise than insight. Integration between layers allows teams to triage faster, act earlier, and improve visibility across the attack surface. Prioritize new solutions based on their ability to integrate with other layers within your cybersecurity solution stack.

3. Build a culture of security awareness.
 Training should be meaningful, not just a compliance checkbox. When employees understand the role they play in reducing risk, they become part of the defense.

4. Use AI to your advantage.
 While attackers use AI to scale their operations, defenders can leverage it to cut through alert overload, prioritize what matters, and maximize limited security resources.

Make cyber resilience cool: Join OpenText for White Hat Hacker Wars

Cyber resilience isn’t a one-time achievement, it’s a continuous cycle of education, adaptation, and improvement. By focusing on identity, integration, awareness, and AI, organizations can strengthen their posture and face the evolving cybercrime landscape with confidence.

Cybersecurity Awareness Month is the perfect opportunity to step back and evaluate your security posture. Review your playbooks, test your response plans, and make sure resilience is more than just a talking point, it’s a business priority. Cyber criminals aren’t slowing down, and your defenses shouldn’t either.

We’re here to help. OpenText Cybersecurity is hosting White Hat Hackers Wars for the entire month of October with expert tips, games, videos, and challenges to help you engage your entire organization in building cyber resilience. It’s educational, quirky, slightly irreverent, and a whole lot of fun. Share the excitement on our LinkedIn, and X pages and visit our White Hat Hacker Wars homepage for more info.

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Grayson Milbourne

Grayson Milbourne is the Security Intelligence Director at OpenText Cybersecurity, a division of OpenText. Grayson’s nearly two decades of security intelligence expertise include malware analysis, data science, and security education. In his current role, Grayson is focused on efficacy development to ensure the company’s security management products (which include the Webroot portfolio) are able to defend against the most cutting-edge threats. He is a longtime advocate for better 3rd party testing of security products and represents OpenText Security Solutions at the Anti-Malware Testing and Standards organization, AMTSO. Through his efforts, AMTSO released testing standards that greatly improved testing quality when followed. Grayson is an avid participant in the security community and drives awareness of current threats by speaking at major events such as RSA and Virus Bulletin. He is a frequent guest on local NBC affiliates and several cybersecurity podcasts. Beyond his passion for protecting people from cyberthreats, Grayson loves aviation and holds a private pilot license. His other passions include strategic boards games, skiing and playing golf. He lives in Louisville, Colorado with his wife, Danielle and their two cats, Theodore and Aiden.

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