AI adoption is exposing a new generation of data security risks
Written by: Yolande Gething Save to Instapaper
02 June 2026
Cyberforensics warns that rapid AI adoption is creating new data security risks that traditional data loss prevention tools were not designed to address.
According to Yolande Gething, organisations must strengthen AI governance, monitoring and security controls to protect sensitive data while enabling innovation.
As businesses accelerate the use of generative AI tools, cybersecurity teams are confronting a growing reality: traditional data loss prevention (DLP) controls were never designed for the way employees now use AI.
This is according to Yolande Gething, Principal Cyber Security Specialist at Cyberforensics, part of the Hyperclear Tech group.
Traditional DLP Tools Were Not Built For AI
For years, DLP strategies focused on monitoring structured data moving through predictable channels such as email, USB devices, printing, and file transfers.
But browser-based AI platforms, autonomous agents, and AI-connected enterprise applications are fundamentally changing how sensitive data moves through systems.
“Traditional DLP tools were built around known loss vectors and structured data,” says Gething.
“But employees are now pasting sensitive information directly into AI tools, uploading files into browser-based platforms, and connecting AI systems to internal data sources in ways many businesses are not properly monitoring.”
New Risks Emerging Through Everyday Workflows
Unlike conventional data transfers, AI-related exposure often occurs through ordinary employee workflows.
Staff upload reports into AI assistants to summarise documents, analyse spreadsheets, draft presentations, or generate communications.
Developers increasingly rely on AI coding assistants to accelerate software delivery, while AI tools are also being connected directly to cloud platforms such as SharePoint and Google Drive.
The problem, cybersecurity specialists warn, is that many users do not fully understand where that data goes once it leaves the organisation’s environment.
Depending on provider policies and configurations, information entered into public AI tools may be temporarily stored, retained for monitoring, or even used to improve future AI models.
Why Existing Security Controls Are Struggling
The challenge is that traditional DLP solutions rely heavily on pattern matching, exact fingerprinting, and predefined rules.
AI interactions are far less predictable.
Sensitive information can now appear in prompts, screenshots, conversational queries, generated outputs, or automated workflows that older DLP tools were never designed to inspect effectively.
At the same time, autonomous AI agents introduce additional concerns.
Compromised agents could potentially exfiltrate sensitive information rapidly or exploit excessive permissions granted to AI systems.
Poorly configured integrations may also expose large volumes of enterprise data unintentionally.
Software development environments present another growing risk area.
AI-generated code may contain vulnerabilities or insecure logic if developers fail to apply sufficient human oversight before deploying outputs into production systems.
Organisations Are Rethinking Data Loss Prevention
In response, organisations are beginning to rethink how DLP functions in practice.
Security teams are increasingly exploring AI-aware monitoring tools capable of analysing browser interactions, prompt activity, and contextual data usage patterns.
Technologies such as browser isolation, API-level inspection, and real-time redaction are gaining traction as businesses attempt to regain visibility into how sensitive information is being shared with AI platforms.
Governance is also becoming a priority.
Many businesses are introducing formal AI acceptable-use policies, employee awareness programmes, and vendor risk assessments aimed at understanding how AI providers store, process, and protect enterprise data.
NLP-enabled DLP tools are also emerging as a key focus because they can analyse the meaning and context of information rather than relying solely on static keywords or file fingerprints.
Governance Must Keep Pace With Innovation
“The reality is that companies need to evolve their current approach to DLP by incorporating technologies that are proving successful in monitoring AI interactions,” Gething explains.
The growing concern among cybersecurity professionals is that AI adoption is happening faster than governance and security controls can mature.
Many employees are already using AI tools informally, often outside approved enterprise frameworks, creating a rise in so-called “shadow AI” usage.
At the same time, organisations are under pressure not to slow innovation.
Businesses want employees to benefit from the productivity gains AI can deliver, but without exposing sensitive customer data, intellectual property, financial information, or regulated records in the process.
For many, the question is no longer whether AI introduces new data loss risks.
It is whether existing security models can evolve quickly enough to keep pace.
Ends
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