Astrix Security advanced its positioning in AI cybersecurity this week with a major product expansion, new training initiatives, and heightened visibility around RSA Conference 2026. The company unveiled a multi-layer AI agent discovery and control architecture aimed at identifying both sanctioned and shadow AI agents, MCP servers, and non-human identities across enterprise environments.
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The platform’s four-pronged discovery framework integrates with leading AI platforms, uses non-human identity fingerprinting, ingests telemetry from EDR and network sensors, and supports a bring-your-own-service model. These feeds are consolidated to map each agent to its credentials, reachable resources, accountable owner, and an automated risk score that supports prioritized remediation.
Astrix also expanded its Agent Control Plane with a real-time policy engine called Agent Policies, enabling granular allow, flag, and block rules by user, department, platform, and resource type. Unrecognized shadow AI activity is flagged before execution, positioning the system as a control layer that moves enterprises from passive visibility to active enforcement over AI agent actions.
In parallel, Astrix introduced an AI Agent Security Academy for security and engineering leaders, offering hands-on workshops, self-paced modules, and expert-led sessions on securing AI agents, MCP servers, and automated access. Participants can earn tiered digital certifications such as Certified Agentic Security Professional and Certified Agentic Security Master, which may deepen customer engagement and support lead generation.
The company’s strategy received external validation as Gartner cited Astrix as a sample vendor in a report emphasizing that future AI security will focus on securing agent actions rather than prompts. Astrix is leveraging this recognition and its academy launch as part of a broader RSAC 2026 campaign, including a booth presence, dedicated meetings, an “Agentic Connection Point,” and technical workshops on Model Context Protocol security.
Multiple LinkedIn updates stressed the risks of shadow AI agents that operate outside traditional identity governance, highlighting gaps in existing security stacks. Collectively, the week’s developments suggest Astrix is concentrating on product differentiation, education, and thought leadership in an emerging AI agent security niche, which could influence future enterprise adoption and strengthen its competitive position as AI workloads scale.

