AI will be a theme of the Infosecurity Europe exhibition, say organisers Reed. According to the show’s 2025 Cybersecurity Trends Report, AI-generated attacks are now the primary driver of cybersecurity investment. Generative AI has overtaken other concerns to become the top perceived risk among 28 per cent of cybersecurity professionals. The impact of AI is far-reaching, with 78pc saying it will force a complete overhaul of their security strategy, while 71pc believe it will increase automation across their organisation, and 80pc report that AI is now a regular topic of discussion at board level.
Hence a AI and cloud security stage to explore AI-driven threat vectors such as deepfakes, automated phishing and LLM exploitation, alongside strategies for securing AI and GenAI systems. Brad Maule-ffinch, Event Director at Infosecurity Europe, said: “AI is fundamentally reshaping how we think about cyber risk, and how we plan for it. What we’re seeing this year is a community eager to move beyond awareness into action, to understand where the real risks are, what the opportunities might be and how to respond strategically.”
Another new spaces at the exhibition at London Excel in Docklands will be the Channel Zone, about resellers, integrators, MSSPs and other channel players. On day one of the three, CISO Ian Thornton-Trump is among the speakers; on Tuesday, June 3, from 1:30pm, on how AI is reshaping cybersecurity. A new Infosec Hub will offer a destination for cyber people; with peer discussion groups and analyst drop-in clinics hosted by Forrester and Frost & Sullivan. Also new are Infosec Table Talks, a series of small-group conversations lasting 30 to 45 minutes, in a vendor-free setting. Topics include securing your AI, identity management and real-world implementation issues. A comparative view of cybersecurity policy in the EU and UK will identify where harmonisation and collaboration may be possible amid ongoing geopolitical shifts; on Wednesday, June 4, from 2pm. A session on how UK policy is driving secure software development, AI risk management, and IoT/OT resilience runs on the final day, Thursday, June 5, from 10.30am.
Drop-in clinics over the week will give attendees the chance to speak with analysts about GRC challenges, human risk management and professional registration; while workshops from the market researchers Forrester and Frost & Sullivan will provide guidance on navigating spending priorities and understanding the outlook across security domains. Some 300 exhibitors are expected. Visit https://www.infosecurityeurope.com.





