403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Knowbe4 Research Finds 86% Of Phishing Attacks Are AI Driven
(MENAFN- Mid-East Info) Phishing Threat Trends Report evaluates attacks from more than 3,000 unique threat actors
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, May, 2026 – KnowBe4, the global leader in digital workforce security, securing both AI agents and humans, today announced new research, Phishing Threat Trends Report Volume Seven. The report finds a seismic shift in the attack vectors utilized to conduct phishing attacks, including touchpoints outside of traditional email communication such as calendar invitations and messaging tools. “The inbox is no longer the only front line for coordinated social engineering attacks,” said Jack Chapman, SVP of Threat Intelligence, KnowBe4.“Cybercriminals are actively broadening the email threat landscape. As businesses rely on tools for real-time collaboration, cybercriminals have added this to their attacks, along with targeting people's calendars. This attack method targets people and technology together. This escalation in scale of threat brings a whole new issue to the forefront.” Key findings from the report include the following revelations from the last six months:
KnowBe4 empowers the modern workforce to make smarter security decisions every day. Trusted by more than 70,000 organizations worldwide, KnowBe4 is the pioneer of digital workforce security, securing both AI agents and humans. The KnowBe4 Platform provides attack simulation and training, collaboration security, and agent security powered by AIDA (Artificial Intelligence Defense Agents) and a proprietary Risk Score. The platform leverages 15 years of behavioral data to combat advanced threats including social engineering, prompt injection, and shadow AI. By securing humans and agents, KnowBe4 leads the industry in workforce trust and defense. More info at knowbe4.
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, May, 2026 – KnowBe4, the global leader in digital workforce security, securing both AI agents and humans, today announced new research, Phishing Threat Trends Report Volume Seven. The report finds a seismic shift in the attack vectors utilized to conduct phishing attacks, including touchpoints outside of traditional email communication such as calendar invitations and messaging tools. “The inbox is no longer the only front line for coordinated social engineering attacks,” said Jack Chapman, SVP of Threat Intelligence, KnowBe4.“Cybercriminals are actively broadening the email threat landscape. As businesses rely on tools for real-time collaboration, cybercriminals have added this to their attacks, along with targeting people's calendars. This attack method targets people and technology together. This escalation in scale of threat brings a whole new issue to the forefront.” Key findings from the report include the following revelations from the last six months:
-
86% of phishing attacks were AI driven
49% increase in calendar invite phishing
139% surge in the use of Reverse Proxies as a tool to steal Microsoft 365 credentials
41% escalation in Microsoft Teams attacks
A new trend shifting from single-vector attacks to multi-channel orchestration
More targeted social engineering was discovered, exemplified by internal team impersonation which was seen in 30% of attacks from threat actors in Q1 2026
KnowBe4 empowers the modern workforce to make smarter security decisions every day. Trusted by more than 70,000 organizations worldwide, KnowBe4 is the pioneer of digital workforce security, securing both AI agents and humans. The KnowBe4 Platform provides attack simulation and training, collaboration security, and agent security powered by AIDA (Artificial Intelligence Defense Agents) and a proprietary Risk Score. The platform leverages 15 years of behavioral data to combat advanced threats including social engineering, prompt injection, and shadow AI. By securing humans and agents, KnowBe4 leads the industry in workforce trust and defense. More info at knowbe4.
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment