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AI agents pose governance risks as enterprises prioritize speed over security

AI agents are increasingly integrated into enterprise applications, with Gartner projecting 40% adoption by 2026, yet most remain ungoverned. A Delinea report reveals a paradox where organizations feel confident in managing non-human identities but struggle with actual discovery and validation, often prioritizing speed over security controls. The report advocates for applying existing Privileged Access Management (PAM) principles, such as least privilege and just-in-time access, to AI agents, emphasizing the need for automated, real-time authorization and secure credential management to mitigate risks. AI

IMPACT Highlights critical security and governance gaps in enterprise AI adoption, urging the application of existing PAM frameworks to mitigate risks.

RANK_REASON The article is an opinion piece by a CEO discussing the implications of AI agent adoption and governance, rather than a direct announcement of a new product, model, or research finding.

Read on Forbes — Innovation →

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AI agents pose governance risks as enterprises prioritize speed over security

COVERAGE [1]

  1. Forbes — Innovation TIER_1 English(EN) · Art Gilliland, Forbes Councils Member ·

    AI Agents Are Becoming Employees, So Why Aren’t We Governing Them Like One?

    We spent decades building identity governance frameworks for human access. Then we gave AI agents broader access than most employees have, and with less oversight.