Majority of South Africa employees say robots should be more widely used in production, but fear hacking

The majority of employees surveyed in South Africa (92 per cent) believe robots will eventually replace humans in their industry

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Factory workers working with an adept artificial intelligence (AI) robotic arm in a workshop.

According to Kaspersky research, employees in South Africa believe that the better robots become at different tasks, the fewer jobs will remain for humans.

The majority of local employees surveyed (74 per cent) believe that robots should be more widely used across different industries, however, many fear robot hacking.

Today robotics are used together with industrial control systems and other information technology to handle production processes, replacing manual labour and improving efficiency, speed, quality and performance.

Kaspersky conducted a study to learn the opinion of employees of manufacturing companies and other large organisations around the world about the consequences of automation and the increased use of robots.

The goal was to see what employees think about the security of robots and automated systems in their companies. The survey included respondents from Saudi Arabia, UAE, Turkey, Egypt, and South Africa.

Employees reported an increase in robotisation levels in their companies over the last 2 years. 33 per cent of employees from South Africa said their organisations already use robots, 39 per cent of local organisations plan to use them in the near future.

Research showed that people expect job loss because of robotisation. The better robots become at different tasks, the fewer jobs will remain for humans. The majority of employees surveyed in South Africa (92 per cent) believe robots will eventually replace humans in their industry.

As robots are advancing in all market sectors, humans need to receive new knowledge and skills not to lose their job to robots. And they are ready to do so: among those who think that their jobs could be replaced by robots, the majority (75 per cent) are willing to learn new skills or improve their existing skills and expertise.

At the same time, many employees remain optimistic in view of robots taking away jobs. They think robot adoption will make humans’ roles safer and intellect-demanding, along with increasing the efficiency of production.

48 per cent believe that enough new jobs will be created to counter the loss of jobs to robots. More jobs will emerge for programmers, data scientists, and engineers – these people will drive robot adoption in the years to come.

Another important finding was that cybersecurity risks increase because of robotisation. The majority of local respondents (89 per cent) believe that robots can get hacked, and 53 per cent know of such incidents in their company or other local companies.

33 per cent of employees from South Africa already use robots, 39 per cent of local organisations plan to use them in the near future

Respondents are split in their assessment of how protected robots are: almost half of the employees surveyed in South Africa (42 per cent) believe that not enough cybersecurity measures are in place to protect the robots in different industries.

“More and more tasks are done by robots, and they are potentially vulnerable to cyber threats. Kaspersky sees its mission in ensuring that cybersecurity remains at the forefront of robot technology adoption, helping to tackle the challenges and capitalise on the opportunities that robotisation presents,” comments Emad Haffar, Head of Technical Experts at Kaspersky.

“In our research, we asked the respondents to judge not only how convenient and efficient robots are to use in production, but also how safe they are. It turned out that many employees believe that using robots causes risks. Robots are going to become the prime vector for cyberattacks in the coming years, and they need protection here and now. Before one integrates robots into production, one needs to guarantee network intrusion robustness and overall network security. It’s also important to ensure the protection of robotic controllers, automation systems, and supply chains. Dedicated solutions like  may become an efficient assistant for protecting robotics in production.”

To keep your industrial computer systems protected from various threats, Kaspersky experts recommend:

  • Conducting regular security assessments of  to identify and eliminate possible cyber security issues.
  • Establishing continuous vulnerability assessment and triage as a base for effective vulnerability management process. Dedicated solutions like may become an efficient assistant and a source of unique actionable information, not fully available to the public.
  • Performing timely updates for the key components of the enterprise’s OT network; applying security fixes and patches or implementing compensating measures as soon as it is technically possible is crucial for preventing a major incident that might cost millions due to the interruption of the production process.
  • Using Industrial EDR solutions such as Kaspersky Industrial Cybersecurity for Nodes with EDR for timely detection of sophisticated threats, investigation, and effective remediation of incidents.
  • Improving the response to new and advanced malicious techniques by building and strengthening your teams’ incident prevention, detection, and response skillsfor IT security teams and OT personnel is one of the key measures helping to achieve this.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Kaspersky.

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