Deception technology is a security technique that seeds decoys such as fake files, AI agents, LLM APIs, and network segments into an enterprise’s environment. These decoys can then trap attackers who attempt to infiltrate the network in an AI-powered cyberattack.Legitimate users never engage with decoys, so any interaction with a decoy produces an immediate, high-fidelity signal of a breach. Deception technology turns an enterprise’s systems into a trap for would-be attackers. The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) recommends that all enterprises implement deception capabilities immediately because of emerging AI security risks. AI-powered attackers can execute a full kill chain in minutes, but traditional tools like EDR, SIEM, and XDR can’t flag these attacks fast enough. Deception technology solves this problem by generating immediate, high-fidelity alerts that can stop sophisticated threats like AI-augmented cyberattacks.This post will walk through how deception technology works, why it’s different from traditional tools, and how it can prevent cyberattacks. How does deception technology work? Deception technology follows these steps to prevent cyberattacks:Security teams deploy fake assets including decoy servers, AI chatbots, AI training data, and endpoints. From the perspective of a bad actor, these decoys are indistinguishable from legitimate resources.An attacker gains initial access. Then, they look for valuable targets in the network.The attacker finds and interacts with a decoy asset. For example, they click a lure document, use a honey token, or log in with fake credentials.The deception solution produces a deterministic, high-fidelity alert.Security teams monitor attacker behavior. Deception solutions gather threat intelligence such as attacker TTPs, the types of data and systems being targeted, and if the bad actor is a solo threat or part of a larger campaign.The bad actor is slowed down and misdirected as they explore misleading information being fed to them via the deception solution. This information includes fake credentials, bogus network maps, and dead-end file paths.Security teams continue to gather threat intelligence. The attacker’s actions are logged and analyzed so that the enterprise can strengthen its defenses in the future.Integrations with SIEM, SOAR, and endpoint security tools trigger automated responses, such as isolating the bad actor’s device, revoking access tokens, or blocking suspicious IPs before they can access real assets.Post-incident analysis uses information from the bad actor’s actions to help patch vulnerabilities, update threat models, and refine the deception layer further.Deception uses active defense techniques to engage, mislead, and manipulate attackers within the network. Active defense flips the power dynamic of a cyberattack. By shifting from a defensive to an offensive posture, enterprises can respond more quickly and decisively to threats. They can monitor attacker techniques in real time, gather valuable threat intelligence, and remain confident that no legitimate resources are at risk.Why traditional defenses struggle to protect against AI-powered attacksTraditional defenses like signature-based and behavior-based tools (think: EDR, SIEM, and XDR) correlate events and generate probabilistic alerts. These correlations can take hours or days to produce, but modern AI-powered attacks move across the kill chain within minutes.AI-orchestrated attacks also probe environments at scale. For example, recent research from ThreatLabz recorded 89.9M interactions with external decoys in only six months.Traditional environments struggle to keep up with both the speed and volume of these probes. Tools like web application and API security solutions have a 45% false positive rate according to ESG, and these tools won’t generate an alert in 91% of identity attacks.Unlike traditional defenses, deception technology produces immediate, deterministic alerts. It doesn’t rely on signatures or behavior baselining, and it doesn’t produce noisy alerts that require manual triage. Deception can therefore respond quickly and confidently in high-stakes, rapidly-developing situations like AI-powered cyberattacks. How deception protects against modern AI-accelerated threatsDeception surfaces malicious activity at each stage of the kill chain, from the minute a bad actor probes the perimeter to when they move laterally across the network to interact with endpoints, Active Directory, and cloud environments. Deception seeds each of these layers with decoys, lures, and breadcrumbs to protect against AI-powered attacks like APTs, ransomware, insider threats, fileless attacks, and supply chain exploits. Let’s walk through some examples of how deception stops attacks.Counters AI-orchestrated attacksAI agents can enumerate networks, harvest credentials, and move laterally in environments much faster than humans. EDR, SIEM, and other traditional tools can’t correlate events fast enough to identify these attacks in real time. Bad actors program their AI agents to thoroughly review all resources, which means those agents will inevitably probe a decoy. Deception technologies with agentic attack deception will then alert on the probe and disrupt that AI agent in-real-time.Detects lateral movement before ransomware executesOnce bad actors breach the network, they move laterally by escalating privileges and identifying high-value targets like file servers, backup systems, and domain controllers. Then, they deploy ransomware.Deception puts resources like fake Active Directory objects, decoy file shares, and lure credentials strategically so that bad actors must encounter those decoys as they move laterally. Any interaction with those decoys generates an immediate alert and triggers automated containment procedures before any ransomware can execute.Protects GenAI infrastructureAs enterprises deploy GenAI infrastructure like LLMs, RAG pipelines, and AI APIs, bad actors probe this infrastructure for vulnerabilities. Attacks targeting AI infrastructure include everything from prompt injection to model scraping, poisoning of training data, and exfiltration of sensitive information from vector databases. GenAI infrastructure deception deploys resources like decoy LLM chatbots, fake AI APIs, and honey tokens inside RAG pipelines and vector stores. Bad actors trying to manipulate or extract data from GenAI systems are funneled into these traps, which cause the deception solution to generate an alert. How deception supports zero trustThe speed of AI-powered attacks makes deception a critical component of any enterprise’s security strategy. For example, AI has dramatically accelerated phishing attacks and ThreatLabz recently identified over 37k AI-generated site instances as malicious. With AI, bad actors can quickly create high-fidelity fake sites, apps, and other lure infrastructure to leverage in a phishing attack. Enterprises should pair deception technology with zero trust to counter these threats. Zero trust minimizes the attack surface via identity verification, least-privileged access, and continuous validation. But zero trust can’t guarantee that a bad actor with compromised credentials won’t breach the environment, which is where deception comes in.Deception identifies bad actors who’ve slipped through the cracks and then manipulates them to gather the threat intelligence that security teams need to harden their defenses. Together, zero trust and deception create a defense-in-depth strategy in which access is tightly controlled at every entry point, and any attacker who still manages to breach the environment will walk into a trap. Interested in learning more about deception?See how Zscaler Deception prevented ten real-world cyberattacks.
[#item_full_content] Deception technology is a security technique that seeds decoys such as fake files, AI agents, LLM APIs, and network segments into an enterprise’s environment. These decoys can then trap attackers who attempt to infiltrate the network in an AI-powered cyberattack.Legitimate users never engage with decoys, so any interaction with a decoy produces an immediate, high-fidelity signal of a breach. Deception technology turns an enterprise’s systems into a trap for would-be attackers. The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) recommends that all enterprises implement deception capabilities immediately because of emerging AI security risks. AI-powered attackers can execute a full kill chain in minutes, but traditional tools like EDR, SIEM, and XDR can’t flag these attacks fast enough. Deception technology solves this problem by generating immediate, high-fidelity alerts that can stop sophisticated threats like AI-augmented cyberattacks.This post will walk through how deception technology works, why it’s different from traditional tools, and how it can prevent cyberattacks. How does deception technology work? Deception technology follows these steps to prevent cyberattacks:Security teams deploy fake assets including decoy servers, AI chatbots, AI training data, and endpoints. From the perspective of a bad actor, these decoys are indistinguishable from legitimate resources.An attacker gains initial access. Then, they look for valuable targets in the network.The attacker finds and interacts with a decoy asset. For example, they click a lure document, use a honey token, or log in with fake credentials.The deception solution produces a deterministic, high-fidelity alert.Security teams monitor attacker behavior. Deception solutions gather threat intelligence such as attacker TTPs, the types of data and systems being targeted, and if the bad actor is a solo threat or part of a larger campaign.The bad actor is slowed down and misdirected as they explore misleading information being fed to them via the deception solution. This information includes fake credentials, bogus network maps, and dead-end file paths.Security teams continue to gather threat intelligence. The attacker’s actions are logged and analyzed so that the enterprise can strengthen its defenses in the future.Integrations with SIEM, SOAR, and endpoint security tools trigger automated responses, such as isolating the bad actor’s device, revoking access tokens, or blocking suspicious IPs before they can access real assets.Post-incident analysis uses information from the bad actor’s actions to help patch vulnerabilities, update threat models, and refine the deception layer further.Deception uses active defense techniques to engage, mislead, and manipulate attackers within the network. Active defense flips the power dynamic of a cyberattack. By shifting from a defensive to an offensive posture, enterprises can respond more quickly and decisively to threats. They can monitor attacker techniques in real time, gather valuable threat intelligence, and remain confident that no legitimate resources are at risk.Why traditional defenses struggle to protect against AI-powered attacksTraditional defenses like signature-based and behavior-based tools (think: EDR, SIEM, and XDR) correlate events and generate probabilistic alerts. These correlations can take hours or days to produce, but modern AI-powered attacks move across the kill chain within minutes.AI-orchestrated attacks also probe environments at scale. For example, recent research from ThreatLabz recorded 89.9M interactions with external decoys in only six months.Traditional environments struggle to keep up with both the speed and volume of these probes. Tools like web application and API security solutions have a 45% false positive rate according to ESG, and these tools won’t generate an alert in 91% of identity attacks.Unlike traditional defenses, deception technology produces immediate, deterministic alerts. It doesn’t rely on signatures or behavior baselining, and it doesn’t produce noisy alerts that require manual triage. Deception can therefore respond quickly and confidently in high-stakes, rapidly-developing situations like AI-powered cyberattacks. How deception protects against modern AI-accelerated threatsDeception surfaces malicious activity at each stage of the kill chain, from the minute a bad actor probes the perimeter to when they move laterally across the network to interact with endpoints, Active Directory, and cloud environments. Deception seeds each of these layers with decoys, lures, and breadcrumbs to protect against AI-powered attacks like APTs, ransomware, insider threats, fileless attacks, and supply chain exploits. Let’s walk through some examples of how deception stops attacks.Counters AI-orchestrated attacksAI agents can enumerate networks, harvest credentials, and move laterally in environments much faster than humans. EDR, SIEM, and other traditional tools can’t correlate events fast enough to identify these attacks in real time. Bad actors program their AI agents to thoroughly review all resources, which means those agents will inevitably probe a decoy. Deception technologies with agentic attack deception will then alert on the probe and disrupt that AI agent in-real-time.Detects lateral movement before ransomware executesOnce bad actors breach the network, they move laterally by escalating privileges and identifying high-value targets like file servers, backup systems, and domain controllers. Then, they deploy ransomware.Deception puts resources like fake Active Directory objects, decoy file shares, and lure credentials strategically so that bad actors must encounter those decoys as they move laterally. Any interaction with those decoys generates an immediate alert and triggers automated containment procedures before any ransomware can execute.Protects GenAI infrastructureAs enterprises deploy GenAI infrastructure like LLMs, RAG pipelines, and AI APIs, bad actors probe this infrastructure for vulnerabilities. Attacks targeting AI infrastructure include everything from prompt injection to model scraping, poisoning of training data, and exfiltration of sensitive information from vector databases. GenAI infrastructure deception deploys resources like decoy LLM chatbots, fake AI APIs, and honey tokens inside RAG pipelines and vector stores. Bad actors trying to manipulate or extract data from GenAI systems are funneled into these traps, which cause the deception solution to generate an alert. How deception supports zero trustThe speed of AI-powered attacks makes deception a critical component of any enterprise’s security strategy. For example, AI has dramatically accelerated phishing attacks and ThreatLabz recently identified over 37k AI-generated site instances as malicious. With AI, bad actors can quickly create high-fidelity fake sites, apps, and other lure infrastructure to leverage in a phishing attack. Enterprises should pair deception technology with zero trust to counter these threats. Zero trust minimizes the attack surface via identity verification, least-privileged access, and continuous validation. But zero trust can’t guarantee that a bad actor with compromised credentials won’t breach the environment, which is where deception comes in.Deception identifies bad actors who’ve slipped through the cracks and then manipulates them to gather the threat intelligence that security teams need to harden their defenses. Together, zero trust and deception create a defense-in-depth strategy in which access is tightly controlled at every entry point, and any attacker who still manages to breach the environment will walk into a trap. Interested in learning more about deception?See how Zscaler Deception prevented ten real-world cyberattacks.