
“While the world met the early signs of this revolution with deep cynicism and tried to strike it down with outdated tools like DLP [data loss prevention], the pain we saw in our customers’ eyes and their hunger to truly understand AI convinced my co-founder and me that a fundamental shift was underway,” wrote Matan Getz, co-founder and CEO of Aim Security, in a blog announcing the acquisition. “We firmly believed AI was destined to join network, endpoint, identity, data, and cloud as a core technological and cybersecurity foundation.”
By integrating Aim’s inspection technology into Cato’s distributed enforcement layer called Single Pass Cloud Engine, or SPACE, Cato’s platform will be able to analyze AI interactions in real-time, according to Cato. The capability will be able to monitor AI prompts, responses, agent workflows, and model outputs, which will provide customers with deep visibility into AI.
“This is not simply DLP repackaged for AI. It is a new security attack surface requiring brand new security capabilities, and Aim’s technology was purpose-built to deliver,” wrote Cato’s Kramer in a blog. “Enterprises will need controls over AI interactions, just as they did for web, cloud, and email in past decades. What is different this time is the speed. AI adoption is measured in months, not years. Just as SASE became the foundation for a new era of networking and security, enterprises now need to extend this foundation for the speed and complexity of AI.”