Frankfurt am Main, Germany, December 16th, 2025/CyberNewsWire/--
The findings are based on analysis of current threat activity, industry research, and insights from the
Cybersecurity is entering uncharted territory as the global threat landscape evolves at high speed. Geopolitical instability, fractured supply chains, and rapid advances in artificial intelligence are reshaping how cyber operations are conducted.
According to PwC’s Global Digital Trust Insights 2026, geopolitical uncertainty has become one of the strongest drivers of increased cybersecurity investment, while many organizations continue to underinvest in proactive measures such as monitoring, testing, and hardening. These conditions leave critical gaps that increasingly sophisticated attackers are able to exploit.
Against this backdrop, Link11 has identified five developments expected to define the cybersecurity environment for European organizations in the year ahead.
Five Key Cybersecurity Trends for 2026
1. DDoS Attacks Will Increasingly Be Used as Diversion Tactics
While IT teams are focused on keeping systems online, attackers may exploit the distraction to infiltrate networks, steal sensitive data, or deploy covert malware. These hybrid operations often remain undetected until long after the initial DDoS wave has been mitigated.
For European organizations, this underscores the need for incident response frameworks that treat any DDoS alert as a potential precursor to a broader, multi-vector intrusion.
2. API-First Architectures Increase Exposure to Misconfigurations and Business Logic Abuse
APIs will continue to be the backbone of Europe’s digital services, including financial platforms, e-commerce, and public-sector portals. As they grow in number and complexity, improperly secured or undocumented APIs are becoming one of the most attractive entry points for threat actors.
These attackers exploit weaknesses through automated scraping, credential-stuffing campaigns, or by targeting high-value endpoints designed for critical business operations. In 2026, organizations that rely on large ecosystems of internal and external APIs will face rising risks of data leakage, process manipulation, and unauthorized access.
3. Integrated WAAP Platforms Overtake Fragmented Web Security Architectures
Traditional, siloed web security tools – such as separate web application firewalls (WAFs), standalone distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) filters, and isolated bot management systems – are no longer adequate against multi-layer attacks.
The shift toward consolidated
4. AI-Driven DDoS Mitigation Becomes Essential Against Hyper-Scale Attacks
DDoS attacks have evolved dramatically in terms of both scale and complexity.
5. Regulatory Pressure Intensifies as Cybersecurity Oversight Expands Across Europe
Regulatory frameworks such as
Additionally, governments are moving toward stronger accountability for software vendors through Secure-by-Design mandates and mandatory Software Bills of Materials (SBOMs). For many organizations, compliance will evolve from an annual task to an integral operational practice.
A More Complex Threat Landscape Requires Unified Defenses
Jens-Philipp Jung, the CEO of Link11, emphasizes the broader implications:
“In 2026, we expect DDoS attacks to be used far more often as smokescreens for deeper, more damaging intrusions.” This is not just an organizational risk; it is a systemic challenge affecting the availability and integrity of digital services across Europe. Strengthening resilience will require a coordinated approach involving awareness, knowledge sharing, and adoption of integrated, AI-driven security platforms.”
About Link11
Link11 is a BSI-qualified provider of DDoS protection for critical infrastructure. With PCI DSS, SOC 2 Type II, and ISO 27001 certifications, the company meets the highest standards in data security.
Contact
Lisa Froehlich
Link11 GmbH
This story was published as a press release by Cybernewswire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging