Organisations worldwide are increasing investments in data privacy frameworks while preparing for artificial intelligence adoption, according to Cisco’s 2025 Data Privacy Benchmark Study. The annual survey of 2,600 privacy professionals across 12 countries highlights evolving attitudes toward data governance in the age of generative AI.
Key findings show 86% of respondents endorse privacy laws – a six percentage-point increase from 2024 – while 96% report privacy investments deliver returns exceeding costs. Notably, 99% anticipate reallocating budgets toward AI initiatives within the next three years.
“Privacy and proper data governance are foundational to Responsible AI,” said Dev Stahlkopf, Cisco’s Chief Legal Officer. The findings suggest businesses view robust privacy frameworks as prerequisites for ethical AI deployment rather than competing priorities.
The study reveals a notable dichotomy in data storage preferences: 90% of organisations consider local storage inherently safer, yet 91% (up 5% year-on-year) trust global providers’ security capabilities.
“Interoperable frameworks like the Global Cross-Border Privacy Rules Forum are vital for balancing data sovereignty with international digital commerce,” said Harvey Jang, Cisco’s Chief Privacy Officer.
On AI adoption, 63% of professionals report advanced generative AI knowledge, yet concerns persist: 64% fear accidental data leaks, and 49% admit inputting confidential information into AI tools. According to the Cisco AI Readiness Index, IT governance budgets may double by 2026 to address these risks through specialised safeguards.
Complementary data from Cisco’s 2024 Consumer Privacy Survey shows 53% of global citizens understand national privacy laws. This awareness correlates sharply with confidence: 81% of informed respondents feel capable of protecting their data versus 44% of uninformed individuals.
The report positions data governance as a key competitive differentiator, noting compliant organisations enjoy stronger customer trust. It warns that accelerating AI adoption requires businesses to carefully balance innovation with protections for cross-border data flows and generative AI systems.

