No, I don't think so.
Technology changes rapidly, but there are people driving those technological changes. In general, experts who build the systems understand how they work and how to secure them. There may be a lag time in terms of broad understanding of those cutting-edge technologies, but often those experts are also designing things to make them more secure by default.
I think IoT is a great example. We don't have time to go into the details, but we've all recognized the problems in the past with the Internet of things—home devices, etc.—being deployed in a very insecure fashion. Historically, it was the cheapest and easiest thing to do. If you look at the newer technology that we provide, or that Microsoft or other large-scale providers give you, by default their systems are far more secure. They're updatable in place, which they didn't use to be. They use secure protocols by default; they didn't use to do that. You can go right down the list of how the business interests of these large providers align with building systems that are secure by default, whereas previously, that was left to the person who was building the smart refrigerator or the smart toaster or whatever.
Technological shifts can actually raise the bar across whole industries by investment and by alignment of business interests with higher security.