Cybersecurity is undergoing considerable transformation as Artificial Intelligence (AI) has emerged as both an attack vector and an immensely powerful tool to defend against these attacks. The paper examines how cyber conflict is transformed with the rise of AI and offers a unique theoretical construct called the "Quantum Mirror," where both offensive and defensive AI are utilized and continually evolve in relation to each other. The research used three sources of information to conduct the analysis of AI-enhanced cyber conflict: the 2026 Global Cybersecurity Outlook report, the 2025 Armis Cyberwarfare report, and the first recorded AI-enabled cyber espionage event to synthesize industry, government, and academia sources. Based upon the evidence collected from this array of sources, it was determined that 94% of the respondents believe that AI represents the largest change factor for cybersecurity, and 87% believe that the threat presented by AI represents the fastest growing category of threats. In addition, the research provides a taxonomy of adversarial machine learning attacks, GTG-1002 Autonomous Offensive Artificial Intelligence Campaign, and a summary of emerging defensive measures (i.e., NIST's Adversarial Machine Learning Framework, AI Cyber Challenge) and provides strategic recommendations for architecture resiliency.
Audrey Tobesman2 & Emma Jackson3 Dr. Alex Mathew1* (Thu,) studied this question.