Humanising Security: Building Resilience
EMERALD SAGE
The Digital Resilience Project recently attended an Executive Roundtable hosted by Women in Digital in partnership with Mimecast. This roundtable explored the human dimension of cybersecurity in the age of artificial intelligence. across Australia is a challenge. People engage with technology in vastly different ways and with varying levels of confidence and expertise. This uneven landscape creates gaps that perpetrators exploit, and makes it harder for individuals and communities to stay safe as digital threats rapidly evolve.
A key takeaway: security is a people system as much as a technology system.
The discussion brought together senior leaders to examine how organisations can balance rapid AI adoption with effective governance, risk management, and workforce resilience.
A key takeaway: security is a people system as much as a technology system.
Effective adoption of AI in cybersecurity requires alignment across governance, culture, awareness, and incident response—operating as a connected and adaptive system rather than isolated functions.

For the Digital Resilience Project, these insights reinforce a core principle of our work: technology risk cannot be separated from human safety.
In the context of technology-facilitated abuse, this intersection is critical. Supporting individuals safely requires not only technical capability, but also strong governance, clear boundaries, and human-centred decision-making.
