CyberPeace, India-based non-profit advancing global cyber stability, in association with the United Service Institution of India (USI), on Jan 5 convened a high-impact strategic workshop focused on the urgent need of CyberFirst Responders and AI Safety – highly trained professionals equipped to detect, respond to, and mitigate cyber incidents in real time.
The session engaged around 40 international students from MIT, Harvard and Columbia University, underscoring the growing need for cross-border cyber preparedness as digital risks increasingly transcend geography, jurisdiction, and institutions. The program addressed the most prevalent cyber risks confronting young global citizens today, including digital hygiene lapses, financial scams and online frauds, social media manipulation, identity theft, and cyber-enabled misinformation. The session was designed to move participants beyond awareness towards first-response readiness, positioning individuals as active defenders within the digital ecosystem.
Today’s threat landscape is no longer confined by borders, sectors, or traditional definitions of cybercrime, from AI-powered phishing and deepfake-enabled fraud to autonomous malware, attacks on critical infrastructure, to large-scale data breaches and AI-enabled fraud. They are fast-moving crises – paralysing institutions, bringing economic instability, compromising public trust, causing irreparable financial and reputational damage.
This workshop briought together leading experts for an immersive learning experience featuring keynote sessions, live demos, hands-on security labs, and a team-based incident response simulation. The participants explored the modern Al threat landscape, learn practical defense techniques for securing Al agents, and gain operational skills essential for building safe, trustworthy, and resilient Al environments.
In an increasingly borderless digital environment, CyberFirst Responders are the frontline defenders of the digital ecosystem, tasked with identifying, containing, and mitigating cyber incidents in real time. Unlike conventional cybersecurity roles, this new cadre of professionals operates at the intersection of technology, policy, law enforcement, and international cooperation. Today’s Cyber threats do not respect borders, and attacks often originate from distributed networks spanning multiple jurisdictions. By targeting international students among the most digitally exposed and mobile demographics, the initiative reinforced the urgency of embedding cyber awareness at the grassroots level. A globally informed response framework – grounded in shared intelligence, best practices, and cross-border collaboration – is essential to effectively counter these threats.
This initiative will be further strengthened through a comprehensive engagement at Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology’s Bhubaneswar campus, featuring a cybersecurity hackathon and an intensive one-day Cyber First Responder (CFR) training. The programme builds on KIIT’s sustained leadership in cybersecurity education and its proven track record of hosting high-impact capacity-building initiatives.
Compounding this challenge is the rapid rise of artificial intelligence, which has introduced both powerful defensive tools and unprecedented risks. AI-driven malware, deepfakes, automated social engineering, and algorithmic manipulation are redefining the nature of cybercrime. Without a deep understanding of AI-related cyber risks, response efforts risk being reactive rather than anticipatory. CyberFirst Responders must therefore be trained not only in traditional incident response, but also in identifying AI-generated threats, assessing algorithmic vulnerabilities, and deploying ethical, AI-enabled defence mechanisms.
As governments, enterprises, and societies become increasingly dependent on digital systems, investing in CyberFirst Responders with a global outlook and AI literacy is no longer optional—it is imperative. Building this capability will be foundational to securing digital trust and ensuring resilience in an era defined by intelligent, borderless threats.









