AI and Cybersecurity: New Threats and New Defenses
How AI is being used by hackers and how to protect yourself against it.
Table of contents:- Threats that specifically target SMBs
- The 10 essential measures for an SMB
- The cybersecurity budget for an SMB
- AI in the service of SMB cybersecurity
- GDPR and legal obligations
- Conclusion
Threats that specifically target SMBs
Ransomware
Ransomware remains the number one threat. Attackers encrypt your data and demand a ransom (typically €10,000 to €500,000). SMBs are targeted because they pay up more often than large corporations (which have dedicated security teams).Phishing and social engineering
90% of attacks start with a phishing email. Techniques are becoming increasingly sophisticated, with generative AI making it possible to craft emails that are nearly indistinguishable from legitimate ones.Data theft
Your SMB's customer, supplier, and financial data holds considerable value on the dark web. A data breach triggers legal obligations (CNIL notification within 72 hours), GDPR fines, and a loss of trust.Supply chain attacks
Attackers target your suppliers or service providers to gain access to your business. The security of your ecosystem matters just as much as your own.The 10 essential measures for an SMB
The cybersecurity budget for an SMB
Ground rule: invest 5 to 10% of your IT budget in cybersecurity.
For an SMB with 10–50 employees:
- Basic solutions (antivirus, firewall, MFA): €200–500/month
- Cloud backups: €50–200/month
- Annual training: €1,000–3,000
- Security audit: €3,000–10,000 (one-time)
- Cyber insurance: €1,000–5,000/year
AI in the service of SMB cybersecurity
Artificial intelligence is strengthening security through:
- Anomaly detection: AI identifies suspicious behavior in real time
- Anti-phishing: AI-powered email analysis to detect phishing attempts
- Automated response: automatic isolation of compromised machines
- Vulnerability analysis: continuous scanning of your attack surface
GDPR and legal obligations
As a French SMB, you must:
- Appoint a GDPR point of contact (even part-time)
- Maintain a data processing register
- Notify the CNIL within 72 hours in the event of a data breach
- Obtain explicit consent for personal data
- Enable the exercise of data rights (access, correction, deletion)
Go further: check out our SMB Digital Transformation: The Ultimate 2026 Guide, which covers the full picture.
Conclusion
Cybersecurity is an investment, not a cost. SMBs that secure their systems protect their business, their customers, and their reputation. The solutions are out there, they're financially accessible, and the return on investment is immediate — measured in risks avoided.
Secure your SMB: request a security audit.