Experts at World Economic Forum Annual Meeting warn of surging cybercrime, highlight paths forward

According to the MENA Cyber Summit 2025 report, the region saw a 183 percent year-on-year increase in DDoS attacks in Q1 2024, triggered by escalating geopolitical conflicts and hacktivism. (WEF/File)
According to the MENA Cyber Summit 2025 report, the region saw a 183 percent year-on-year increase in DDoS attacks in Q1 2024, triggered by escalating geopolitical conflicts and hacktivism. (WEF/File)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Experts at World Economic Forum Annual Meeting warn of surging cybercrime, highlight paths forward

Experts at World Economic Forum Annual Meeting warn of surging cybercrime, highlight paths forward
  • ‘Line between digital vulnerability and reputational damage is increasingly blurred as cyberattacks evolve,’ Virtual Routes co-director says
  • Cybercrime damages projected to reach $10.5 trillion annually, with MENA region being particularly vulnerable

DUBAI: Experts at the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting of the Global Future Councils and Cybersecurity on Tuesday discussed how global cyber defenders are attempting to outsmart cyber criminals by using financial and psychological strategies to anticipate and disrupt attacks before they occur.

The session, titled “Inside the Cyber Criminal Mind,” examined how breakthroughs in 2025 have been achieved through innovative cross sector cooperation, and how these lessons could shape stronger cyber defenses in 2026.

Max Smeets, co-director of Virtual Routes, noted that the line between digital vulnerability and reputational damage is increasingly blurred as cyberattacks evolve.

“Attackers can accelerate access and get into one’s files — what can one do? Do you pay them a ransom to make them go away or refuse to pay and try to get a back up of your files?” he asked the audience. 

He described how victims often face a cascade of scenarios following an attack.

“You have leaks and exposure on social media and news,” he said. “Do you start to focus your efforts on IT security or put your resources into your own reputation with a crisis communications team and own the narrative about your leaked incident?”

Smeets said that while cybercrime remains severely underreported, shame and uncertainty are major barriers to disclosure.

“One of the elements is shame, but secondly, one doesn’t immediately know where to go,” he said.

A leading expert in cyber conflict and security, Smeets added that scammers have become increasingly skilled at manipulating human psychology.

“Scammers have to be very good in getting your trust and have the ability to position themselves and they’re learning from each other.”

Global cybercrime has surged in 2025, with damages projected to reach $10.5 trillion annually — making cybercrime the world’s third-largest economy behind the US and China, according to market research company Cybersecurity Ventures.

Ransomware, phishing, financial fraud, and distributed denial-of-service attacks remain prevalent, with government, energy, healthcare, and telecom sectors being prime targets.

The Middle East and North Africa region has also been hit particularly hard.

According to the MENA Cyber Summit 2025 report, the region saw a 183 percent year-on-year increase in DDoS attacks in Q1 2024, triggered by escalating geopolitical conflicts and hacktivism.

The average cost per breach reached $8.05 million — nearly double the global average.

Neal Jetton, who leads the INTERPOL Global Cybercrime Programme, emphasized the critical role of early reporting and international cooperation to prevent attacks.

“I’ve had individuals and businesses reach out to me as victims of data breach and ransom, and the first question I always ask is: which law enforcement agency have you reached out to?” he said. “There’s so much importance in reporting.”

Jetton noted that cybercrime investigations are often hampered by limited resources.

“Cybercrime is tough to investigate, it requires a lot of tools and resources which a lot of countries cannot afford, so INTERPOL steps in to help at times,” he said.

He described a recent multinational operation that brought together experts from across the world to focus on victims, both individuals and businesses.

“We’re bringing countries together, and we went after a whole suite of cybercrime and had over 1,200 arrests of people involved in malicious malware,” he said.

Jetton said the effort succeeded because it prioritized empowerment, strategy, investigation, and prevention.

“Now we will be looking at how to combat phishing and image based sexual abuse and how to stop the industrialization of cybercrime,” he added.

Despite the scale of the threat, both experts agreed there are reasons for optimism.

“It isn’t all doom and gloom,” Smeets said, highlighting how ongoing collaborations are starting to yield real solutions.

“We are getting concrete answers on how to solve such problems effectively. We are cooperating, spreading awareness, there is hope.”

The discussion took place on the second day of the AMGFCC being held in Dubai, where cybersecurity and resilience are among the key themes shaping the global agenda.


Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66

Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66
Updated 56 min 20 sec ago
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Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66

Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66
  • She launched her journalism career in Beirut in 1978 before joining the AP there four years later
  • Ziade also closely covered the Palestine Liberation Organization when it was based in Lebanon and later in Tunisia

BEIRUT: Mona Ziade, who helped The Associated Press cover major events out of the Middle East during the 1980s and ‘90s, including the taking of Western hostages during Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli peace talks, has died. She was 66.
Ziade died Tuesday morning at her home in Beirut from complications of lung cancer after undergoing treatment for months, her daughter Tamara Blanche said. Blanche said that her mother had been unconscious in the hours before she passed away.
Ziade, a dual citizen of Lebanon and Jordan, launched her journalism career with United Press International in Beirut in 1978 before joining the AP four years later.
While covering Lebanon’s 15-year civil war, Ziade’s boss, the AP’s chief Middle East correspondent Terry Anderson, was kidnapped in Beirut in 1985. He was held for seven years, becoming one of the longest-held American hostages in history.
Months after Anderson’s kidnapping, the AP moved its Middle East headquarters from Beirut to Cyprus’ capital, Nicosia. Ziade moved there in 1986 and later married longtime AP correspondent Ed Blanche, who served as the agency’s Middle East editor for 10 years.
Ziade also closely covered the Palestine Liberation Organization when it was based in Lebanon and later in Tunisia, delivering several scoops to the AP through her excellent source work within the group. When the PLO’s chairman, Yasser Arafat, and Israel’s prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, signed a historic peace accord at the White House in 1993, Ziade was there to cover it.
“Mona was a firecracker, a hard-charging young reporter in an international press corps replete with hard chargers and ambitious journalists,” said Robert H. Reid, the AP’s former Middle East regional editor.
“Her razor’s edge was a longtime friendship with the commander of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s military wing, Abu Jihad, a boyhood friend of her father,” Reid said. “That tie was not only an invaluable source of information from a major player in the Middle East, but also a safety guarantee for AP reporters operating in areas of Lebanon controlled by Abu Jihad’s troops.”
Ziade left the AP in 1996 to resettle with her family back in Beirut. She and Blanche helped relaunch Lebanon’s Daily Star newspaper, which had ceased publishing at the height of the civil war. Ziade served as the English-language daily’s national editor before becoming its managing editor.
She left the Daily Star in 2003 and went to work as a communications officer for the World Bank’s Lebanon office.
Before launching her career, Ziade studied communications and political science at Beirut University College, which is now known as Lebanese American University.
Ed Blanche died in Beirut in 2019 after a long battle with cancer. The couple is survived by their daughter, Tamara, and Ed Blanche’s two sons from a previous marriage, Jay and Lee.