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Cloudbrink updates AI features on secure connectivity platform

Cloudbrink announced expanded security and performance capabilities for Artificial Intelligence (AI) agents and browser-based online AI services on its secure connectivity platform, and said the additions allowed organizations to secure users, applications, and AI on a single management surface.

A McKinsey report said 88 percent of enterprises globally were using AI for at least one business function, and the company highlighted cybersecurity risks tied to a diverse set of AI platforms and protocols and non-standardization, alongside the use of AI by cybercriminals.

The company described technical features intended to address those risks, including an agent component that recognizes traffic from AI agents and browser-based services and enforces data protection and compliance policies, a built-in definitions database for identifying AI agent and online service protocols, support for customer-supplied custom agent definitions, and a unified console that provided policy control and visibility into users, applications, AI agents, services, and traffic details.

Cloudbrink said these capabilities built on its existing AI platform introduced last year, and that definitions were constantly updated to include new agent types or protocols while customers could add internally developed or custom AI agents to the definitions database.

“AI is complicating the threat map. Enterprises are using AI in multiple ways across disjointed paths and every path needs to be secured,” said Prakash Mana, CEO of Cloudbrink.

“This becomes even more complex for companies with hybrid workforces. Last year was the year that companies dabbled in AI. In 2026 more enterprises are using AI for serious business and that requires security, scalability, and speed. That’s what Cloudbrink is providing for AI in the enterprise.” The updated Cloudbrink AI platform will be available next month.