Share with your CISO
Radware is betting that AI agent governance is the next mandatory layer of enterprise security infrastructure, not an optional add-on. The company has updated its Agentic AI Protection solution with compliance reporting mapped to ISO 42001, the EU AI Act, and the NIST AI Risk Management Framework, plus expanded monitoring for developer-hosted agents including Anthropic Claude Code. The release also adds behavioral visibility across agent ecosystems, covering how autonomous systems interact with enterprise tools, applications, and data resources across both SaaS and local developer environments.
What this means for your business
The pressure point here isn’t the product, it’s the regulatory calendar. ISO 42001 and the EU AI Act are not hypothetical. If your organization operates in European markets or holds ISO certifications, audit-ready documentation for AI agent behavior is becoming a compliance requirement, not a best practice. CISOs who’ve been treating agentic AI (autonomous software systems that act on goals without step-by-step human instruction) as a future-state problem are already behind the audit cycle. The question is whether you have visibility into what your agents are actually doing today.
Radware’s expansion into developer-hosted agents is the more strategically interesting move, though the company’s interest in expanding platform coverage creates an incentive to frame the threat surface as broader than a cautious read might support. Claude Code and similar AI coding assistants are now common in enterprise developer workflows, and they operate on endpoints that traditional SaaS security tooling doesn’t reach. The recurring failure mode in enterprise security is that monitoring coverage stops at the SaaS boundary while the actual risk migrates to the endpoint. Extending behavioral controls to developer machines closes a gap that most security teams haven’t formally scoped yet.
The vendor market for agentic AI security is consolidating fast around whoever can credibly claim the compliance reporting layer, because that’s what makes the category a board-level line item rather than a discretionary security investment. If your current AI security posture doesn’t produce audit artifacts that map to named regulatory frameworks, that’s the budget conversation to reframe before your next renewal, not after a regulator asks the question first.
Based on reporting from Radware updates Agentic AI Protection with AI governance and compliance capabilities, originally published 2026-07-07 07:17:00.

