Cybersecurity is an ever-evolving entity that consequently requires new and updated cyber policies and infrastructures. When considering the development of cyber policy and infrastructure coupled with the “short arm” of predictive knowledge, it could be beneficial to plan and develop only for what we do know. We can try our best to forecast or predict the future of cybersecurity, but it could ultimately go a number of ways we weren’t expecting. With that being said, I would argue that creating cyber policy and infrastructure that is prevalent to the current state of cybersecurity is the best approach given the limited amount of knowledge we have for the future. While I don’t think that we should rely solely on predictive knowledge when creating cyber policy and infrastructure, I do think it can be a helpful tool to be utilized. For example, by using current trends or previous reports of security breaches a company might be better suited to put together predictions that could potentially protect them from cyber attacks of the same nature. Predictive knowledge should be used as a prevention safeguard by bringing awareness to current trends rather than being used as the driving force for creating cyber policies and infrastructures.