Jakarta, INTI – The surge of increasingly massive cyberattacks in Indonesia demands faster and more adaptive digital solutions. Local threat intelligence platform, Awan Pintar, leverages artificial intelligence (AI) as its primary tool to detect and analyze threats in real-time. The latest report, released in mid-2025, highlights a spike in attacks targeting businesses, households, and critical infrastructure. This initiative was presented by Awan Pintar’s Founder, Yudhi Kukuh, as a proactive step to strengthen the nation’s digital resilience. Awan Pintar’s AI system is expected to help organizations map risks before attacks fully materialize.
Surge of Cyber Attacks and Threat Patterns
Awan Pintar’s network detectors recorded over 133 million cyberattacks in just the first six months of 2025, averaging nine attacks per second. Most attacks exploited old vulnerabilities (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures) to gain initial access before proceeding with data theft or ransomware. Threat sources are also shifting, with domestic-origin attacks rising by 2.35%, indicating that many local devices remain unpatched, use default passwords, or rely on insecure routers.
AI Transforms Data into Threat Intelligence
According to Yudhi Kukuh, “Billions of logs are generated every second, and thousands of anomalies appear every minute. Under these conditions, our AI and machine learning process millions to billions of raw data in real-time to produce threat intelligence that organizations can act on immediately.” In this way, AI helps organizations map attack patterns, popular techniques, and the most frequently exploited vulnerabilities, allowing defense strategies to be prepared before threats reach their systems.
Advantages of AI Compared to Traditional Methods
AI does not rely solely on outdated signatures; it can analyze behavior and detect abnormal activity that has never appeared before. Predictive models can identify security gaps and detect suspicious movements within a very short time. This technology also supports investigations related to the Electronic Information and Transactions Law (UU ITE), Personal Data Protection Law (UU PDP), and digital security certifications like ISO 27001, enhancing organizational readiness against cyber threats.
Conclusion
With cyberattacks occurring nine times every second, reactive approaches are no longer sufficient. AI serves as the foundation for proactive threat intelligence, enabling government organizations and critical sectors such as energy, telecommunications, and banking to build more adaptive digital resilience. Awan Pintar demonstrates that artificial intelligence can be a crucial shield against ever-evolving cyber threats.
Read More:Digital Payment Platform Boosts Security with New Fraud Detector