About the webinar
Gone are the days when social engineering just meant some lazy phishing email or a clumsy impersonation. Now, attackers mix behavioral data, AI-created content, and automated research to pull off influence operations that feel custom-built for every target. The scale and precision are on a whole new level.
In this webinar, Jenny Radcliffe breaks down how social engineering has changed and how organizations can toughen up against these trust-based attacks that don’t just target your software, but the people behind it.
Key topics
• How social engineering has evolved
Attackers have moved from blasting out mass phishing emails to pulling off surgical, highly personalized attacks. They mix cyber intrusion with psychological tricks and narrative control — so every campaign feels tailor-made.
• AI as a game-changer
AI makes it easy for attackers to automate profiling, churn out believable fake content—text, voice, even visuals — and test attack ideas fast. Suddenly, it’s cheap and fast to run huge, effective campaigns.
• Defending your organization
So what do you do about it? Jenny covers practical steps that actually help: raising awareness, sharpening your detection tools, and building true organizational resilience by blending smart tech with ready-for-anything people.
Meet Jenny Radcliffe
Jenny Radcliffe, “The People Hacker,” has made a career out of breaking into secure places — not with fancy gadgets, but with psychology and social engineering. She gets hired to test defenses by outsmarting people, not just machines.
In 2022, she landed in the InfoSec Hall of Fame and was named one of the Top 30 Female Cyber Security Leaders by SC Magazine. She wrote the bestselling “People Hacker: Confessions of a Burglar for Hire” (Simon & Schuster, 2023), which is now being adapted for TV, and she hosts The Human Factor podcast.
Jenny’s a regular on international media, a sought-after keynote speaker, and a multiple-time TEDx contributor — sharing her expertise on scams, cons, and the human side of security with audiences around the world.
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