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AI Speeds Up Development, but Security Falls Behind

AI is Breaking Security Barriers
The rapid adoption of artificial intelligence in software development has led to a surge in vulnerabilities. Analysts at Apiiro report a 10-fold increase in insecure APIs, coinciding with the widespread use of AI-generated code. Developers rely on neural networks for efficiency, but these models often overlook corporate security standards.
Exposed Code, Unprotected Data
Over the past six months, the number of repositories containing sensitive personal and payment data has tripled. Hackers are taking advantage of poorly secured APIs, hijacking sessions, stealing credentials, and injecting malicious code directly into corporate environments.
🛡 Security Can’t Keep Up with Automation
AI generates code far faster than human experts can review it. While a specialist may spend 4–5 hours auditing a single piece of code, an AI can produce dozens of versions in the same timeframe. Without robust automated security analysis and updated protection protocols, critical vulnerabilities will continue to multiply exponentially.

The rapid adoption of artificial intelligence in software development has led to a surge in vulnerabilities. Analysts at Apiiro report a 10-fold increase in insecure APIs, coinciding with the widespread use of AI-generated code. Developers rely on neural networks for efficiency, but these models often overlook corporate security standards.
Over the past six months, the number of repositories containing sensitive personal and payment data has tripled. Hackers are taking advantage of poorly secured APIs, hijacking sessions, stealing credentials, and injecting malicious code directly into corporate environments.
🛡 Security Can’t Keep Up with Automation
AI generates code far faster than human experts can review it. While a specialist may spend 4–5 hours auditing a single piece of code, an AI can produce dozens of versions in the same timeframe. Without robust automated security analysis and updated protection protocols, critical vulnerabilities will continue to multiply exponentially.