Aviation Cybersecurity Conference 2025
In an era defined by system interdependence, digital transformation, geopolitical volatility, and the growing threat of ransomware, resilience has become the new benchmark for aviation cybersecurity. It’s no longer enough to protect data or meet compliance requirements—airports, airlines, and service providers must ensure continuity, adaptability, and trust in the face of disruption.
Why this matters now
Ransomware actors are actively targeting aviation
Aviation has become a high-value target for sophisticated ransomware groups, including those linked to recent high-profile incidents affecting both ground and flight operations. These attacks have disrupted passenger services, impacted logistics, and revealed vulnerabilities in identity and access management systems—particularly through social engineering and lateral movement tactics associated with groups like Scattered Spider. The industry is now under pressure to build resilience into every layer of the aviation ecosystem.
Cyber-physical convergence increases risk
As IT and OT systems become more integrated across air and ground operations, the attack surface continues to expand. These vulnerabilities are no longer theoretical—they pose real-world risks to safety, service continuity, and passenger trust.
AI & automation introduce new attack vectors
While AI enhances threat detection and response, it also creates new attack surfaces. From adversarial machine learning to automated system manipulation, aviation must rethink how it models and mitigates risk in a highly automated environment.
Safety-driven compliance is accelerating
With frameworks such as EASA’s PART-IS, ICAO’s cybersecurity strategy, and emerging national regulations, aviation cybersecurity is being directly tied to airworthiness, safety management, and regulatory approval—making it a board-level concern.
Interconnected ecosystems mean shared exposure
Airlines, airports, OEMs, and service providers function within deeply interdependent supply chains. A vulnerability in one partner can cascade across the ecosystem, leading to operational, reputational, and financial consequences far beyond the initial point of compromise.
Smart infrastructure requires smarter security
The adoption of IoT, cloud-native platforms, and digital twin technologies is transforming aviation infrastructure—but also challenging traditional security models. Visibility, governance, and real-time response are critical to managing blind spots in this rapidly evolving environment.
The conference will provide an opportunity to discuss how cybersecurity can be integrated with operational safety, regulatory requirements, and future developments in aviation technology.