Analyst Insights: Why AI is Breaking Your AppSec Strategy (And How ASPM Fixes It)
Webinar Guests
Overview
An inside look at how AI is rewriting the rules of application security
ArmorCode’s Mark Lambert and Dana Torgersen sit down with with guest speaker Katie Norton, Research Manager at IDC, in a fireside chat revealing how AI is fundamentally transforming application security strategies, budgets, and vendor selection criteria for 2025 and beyond.
This session offers a data-driven analysis of how artificial intelligence is solving the seemingly impossible challenge of managing exponential vulnerability growth while AI-generated code risk explodes and scanner fatigue paralyzes security teams.
3 key insights from this session:
- Discover why ASPM is a top security spending priority for 2025
- Hear about the landscape of ASPM vendors from the 2025 IDC MarketScape report, and understand which features are most beneficial for enterprise deployments
- Beyond the hype: get a view from the experts on how AI is fundamentally changing code and application risk detection, prioritization, and remediation
About the Speakers
Katie Norton is Research Manager for IDC’s DevSecOps and Software Supply Chain Security practice, advising clients on these fast-evolving markets. Her research covers security integration in software development, DevSecOps adoption, ASPM, vulnerability management, and AI applications in security. With a Master’s in Research Administration and experience as a senior data analyst at a startup and academic program analyst at Central Michigan University, Katie takes a data-first approach to analyzing buying patterns, market trends, and helping organizations secure their software factories
Mark Lambert is Chief Product Officer at ArmorCode, leading their AI-powered Application Security Posture Management (ASPM) platform. With 20+ years building security solutions for leading brands, he’s an ASPM authority who’s spoken at RSA, Black Hat, and other major conferences. He holds Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Computer Science from Manchester University, hosts a security podcast, and focuses on breaking down development-security silos to turn security data into actionable risk reduction