April 23, 2026
The paradoxes of today’s digital world are well-known to anyone with a smartphone.
Over the last decade, connectivity has expanded, yet the world has become more fragmented. Our everyday lives are more digital, but we spend more time parsing text messages for scams or deliberating the authenticity of potential deepfakes. Technology is delivering great productivity gains to small businesses while making them a larger target for cybercriminals.
In this environment, exposure becomes the default: Access points are growing, control is hard and reacting to change stops working. AI intensifies these dynamics because it compresses time for everyone, including adversaries.
Today, trust has become the most critical tool to move all businesses forward. Without trust, even the best ideas stall. People hesitate, adoption slows and growth stagnates.
Trust used to be something businesses tried to repair after a breach. Now it must be the starting point, and something to nurture and continuously prove in a world that has fundamentally changed.
It would be impossible to eliminate the risk entirely. Some estimates project cybercrime could cost the world $15.6 trillion annually before 2030, surpassing all but two of the world’s largest economies. Instead, the goal must be to build the ability to see sooner, decide faster and limit impact when, not if, something breaks. Trust today is all about bringing together speed, intelligence and collaboration, and that’s exactly what we’re developing across our teams.
Getting this right isn’t just good business sense. It's the only way to ensure new technologies are embraced and economies can keep growing.
Real advantage comes from understanding context and connecting signals across systems. That’s what turns data into better decisions. This kind of intelligence increases speed, reduces risk and enables proactive action. With the right intelligence, teams can hunt for threats continuously, test assumptions and act before harm occurs, not just triage alerts after the fact.
You can see this shift in how the payments industry is evolving, including the work we’re doing by bringing Recorded Future’s threat intelligence together with Mastercard’s security capabilities, payments infrastructure and partnership models. We’re helping organizations understand where risk concentrates, how it propagates, and how quick, collective action can reduce the cost of cybercrime.
Faster insights mean earlier action, which minimizes impact — and deepens trust.
Security doesn’t scale through isolated heroics. It scales through ecosystems: shared signals, shared standards and partners who can move together as new threats arise, attack vectors shift and failures spread.
Resilience is strongest when public and private sectors plan, exercise and respond together, rather than in parallel. Different players have different sightlines in the digital ecosystem. Startups look at the edges of innovation. Enterprises understand the realities of operating in today’s environment. Governments see where systemic risk concentrates. When those visions combine, our shields strengthen and expand, pushing cybercriminals out of the frame.
During our time here in Miami for the eMerge Americas conference, we’ve had the opportunity to speak to enterprises, startups, investors and government leaders about the need to accelerate resilience in Latin America, where the digital economy is booming but security hasn’t always kept pace. The region has the world’s fastest-growing rate of disclosed cyber incidents — in 2025 alone, Recorded Future tracked 452 ransomware incidents — but only seven countries have developed cybersecurity plans to protect critical infrastructure, and only 20 have formal computer security incident response teams.
That gap is where trust breaks, and where more collaboration can become a growth necessity. We can’t build sustainable economic growth in Latin America without building digital trust and cyber resilience. That’s why we are deepening our footprint here, enhancing regional threat intelligence and resilience and paving the way for stronger public-private collaboration to address these complex risks.
Secure digital access unlocks economic opportunity — and insecurity shuts it down fast. For a first-time digital user, one fraud incident can be enough to opt out for good. For a small business, one account takeover can wipe out months of progress. That’s why trust is inextricably linked to financial health. People can’t build stability on top of systems they’re afraid to use. At Mastercard, we’re committed to connecting and protecting 500 million people and small businesses by 2030, because secure participation is foundational, not optional.
The bar for digital innovation today is not what we can deliver, but what people will trust enough to use, depend upon and harness for their own financial health. Because in the end, trust is the superpower.