Machine identities outnumber humans 40,000 to 1

Cloud defenders are gaining ground as the cloud landscape comes into focus, with 92% of organizations operating without risky human users.

  • Thursday, 13th March 2025 Posted 1 year ago in by Phil Alsop

Sysdig has released its “2025 Cloud-Native Security and Usage Report.” The company’s annual user analysis provides in-depth insights into real-world cloud security and usage trends, highlighting significant enterprise security progress while identifying key areas that demand urgent attention.

The report reveals that organizations of every size and industry across North America; Europe, the Middle East and Africa; and the Asia-Pacific and Japan are making measurable strides in identity and vulnerability management, artificial intelligence (AI) security, and threat detection and response. However, as businesses scale AI adoption and cloud footprints, the growing risk and complexity of machine identities, container image bloat, and attacker automation introduce new hurdles for enterprise security.

“It has been fascinating to watch cloud security evolve since we started reporting on usage eight years ago. When we first looked at container life spans in 2019, half lasted at least five minutes – today, 60% live for one minute or less,” said Loris Degioanni, Sysdig Founder and CTO. “Given the short life span paired with how quickly attackers can move across cloud environments, I am encouraged to see defenders actively detecting and responding to threats in less than 10 minutes.”

Security Progress: Cloud Defenders are Gaining Ground

AI adoption is on the rise, and security is a clear priority: Workloads using AI and machine learning packages grew by 500% over the last year, with the percentage of generative AI packages in use more than doubling. Despite this rapid adoption, public exposure decreased by 38%, signaling a strong commitment to secure AI implementations.

Cloud threat detection and response is faster than ever: Mature security teams are detecting threats in under 5 seconds and initiating response actions within 3.5 minutes on average – outpacing the 10-minute cloud attack window that has historically given adversaries the upper hand. Achieving the 555 Cloud Detection and Response Benchmark isn’t just possible, it’s essential.

Organizations are prioritizing real risk by reducing in-use vulnerabilities: In-use vulnerabilities have declined to less than 6%, reflecting a 64% improvement in vulnerability management over the past two years. This shift shows that organizations are refining their approach to fixing what matters most – vulnerabilities actively running in production workloads – and more effectively strengthening their overall security posture.

Open source security has become the enterprise standard: Organizations across the globe are using open source tools, such as Kubernetes, Prometheus, and Falco – which is used by more than 60% of the Fortune 500 – to defend their cloud infrastructure, evidence of quickly growing trust in open source security standards.

Opportunities for the Year Ahead

Machine identities vastly outnumber humans – and they’re more vulnerable: With 40,000 times more machine identities than human identities, the attack surface has expanded dramatically. Machine identities are also 7.5 times more risky, a dangerous liability given that nearly 40% of breaches start with credential exploitation.

The majority of containers live for one minute or less, but attackers don’t need that long: For the first time, 60% of containers now live for 60 seconds or less. While ephemeral workloads enhance application agility, cloud adversaries automate their reconnaissance to instantly identify and exploit weaknesses. Real-time detection and response is more essential than ever.

Container images are increasingly bloated, and that’s creating undue security risk: The size of container images has quintupled, introducing unnecessary security risks and operational inefficiencies. Larger images increase the attack surface and make deployments more expensive, emphasizing the need for more efficient containers.

Attackers, too, leverage open source capabilities: While open source security tools have become foundational for organizations of all sizes, cybercriminals continue to rely on open source malware and weaponize open source software, a trend first documented in Sysdig’s “2024 Global Threat Year-in-Review.”

“Cybersecurity has long been an arms race between threat actors and defenders, but the battlefield is evolving,” said Crystal Morin, Sysdig Cybersecurity Strategist. “Organizations have made tremendous progress, and the fact that mature security teams can now respond to threats within minutes is a game-changer. But with machine identities multiplying and cloud environments evolving in real time, automation and rapid response have never been more mission-critical. The data in this report makes me optimistic about the future of cyberdefense.” 

Robertet Group is advancing its global operations through GTT’s Secure Connect SASE, with the aim of improving cloud access and supporting...

KOcycle's sustainability efforts earn King's Award

Posted 1 day ago by Sophie Milburn
KOcycle's commitment to sustainability earns them the King’s Award for Enterprise, highlighting their role in helping shape the channel’s ESG...
Panasonic reveals ELEVATE, aiming to enhance its channel partner programme with tiered structures, training, and strategic incentives.
Bitdefender has appointed Frank Koelmel as Chief Revenue Officer, aiming to enhance global business growth and drive go-to-market initiatives.
The State of Application Strategy Report outlines AI’s progression into a production workload, alongside multi-cloud deployment complexity and...
MSP Global will bring together more than 3,000 MSPs and IT leaders at PortAventura near Barcelona on 21–22 October, focusing this year on how...

Westcon-Comstor shares FY26 financial performance update

Posted 2 days ago by Sophie Milburn
Westcon-Comstor reports sales growth and profitability by focusing on software and services, driving margin expansion and adapting to market trends.

Check Point’s agentic platform for network security

Posted 3 days ago by Sophie Milburn
Check Point introduces its Agentic Network Security Orchestration Platform, designed to support network security with increased efficiency and...