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The Next Cybersecurity Crisis Isn’t Breaches—It’s Data You Can’t Trust

Steve Durbin
Published 22 - April - 2026
Read the full article on Security Week
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Data integrity shouldn’t be seen only through the prism of a technical concern but also as a leadership issue.

There is a perceptible shift in how risk is seen across the organization. Data integrity is no longer only about keeping data safe; it’s also about data trust. Organizations are asking themselves, “Can we trust our data?”

In a new era shaped by AI-driven decisions, that question is difficult to answer, and it increasingly has operational significance. Even a minuscule change in training data can significantly increase the likelihood of inaccurate or harmful AI outputs. Organizations have built an operational framework where all decision-making, whether financial, operational, or strategic, is governed by data.

Data distortion, therefore, becomes a very clear and present integrity problem.

While cybersecurity is about deploying security solutions to protect key systems, it’s also about understanding that data is the driving force of any system. We must understand the data flow, its source, the transformation it undergoes as it flows through systems; how it influences whatever it touches, and how it is consumed and enriched. For instance, sales data doesn’t exist in isolation but is integrated with marketing data, CRM profiles, pricing rules, etc., before being used by forecasting models.

Curiosity ensures that people don’t inherently assume their data is valid and trustworthy. This matters because modern threats don’t focus on breaking systems alone, but on manipulating the data inputs these systems consume and leverage.

The Next Cybersecurity Crisis Isn’t Breaches—It’s Data You Can’t Trust
Read the full article on Security Week