Idea of agentic browsers is at odd with the enterprise, says Palo Alto CEO Arora


Idea of agentic browsers is at odd with the enterprise, says Palo Alto CEO Arora

In a Thursday interview with CNBC’s Jim Cramer, Palo Alto Networks CEO Nikesh Arora steered the enterprise may not be snug with browsers run by agentic synthetic intelligence.

“I think unless there are controls built into agentic browsers, which are oriented around credentials and enterprise security, they’re not going to be allowed in enterprises in 24 months,” Arora stated.

Arora defined that as a client, he likes the thought of an agentic browser — one that may, for instance, carry out duties like reserving aircraft tickets, making reservations or calling Ubers. However, he stated that browsers would want “credentials” from customers, and so customers’ “ability and desire to give them autonomy becomes important.”

He predicted that many main tech firms will begin to develop agentic browsers, noting they’re already spending billions to create and function spectacular fashions. But he stated agentic browsers are “at odds with the enterprise,” as firms could be cautious of the AI brokers’ autonomy.

Arora talked about his firm’s plans to buy CyberArk, an Israeli identification safety supplier. The acquisition is price $25 billion and could be the largest deal the cybersecurity firm has ever made. He claimed {that a} substantial majority of breaches happen due to credential theft. Arora steered that in comparison with 15 or 20 years in the past, it is now simpler for extra members of an organization to have the credentials to entry privileged data — “the crown jewels” — which suggests staff should be protected equally.

“[CyberArk] figured out a way with the lowest intrusion, lowest friction, lowest latency way possible, to figure out a way to manage the crown jewels and manage the access for all of users,” Arora stated.

Palo Alto CEO Nikesh Arora goes one-on-one with Jim Cramer

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