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Zenity Deepens AI Agent Security Focus With AWS Integration, Standards Work and EU AI Act Push

Zenity Deepens AI Agent Security Focus With AWS Integration, Standards Work and EU AI Act Push

Zenity featured prominently this week in a series of announcements underscoring its focus on securing agentic AI systems and shaping emerging industry standards. The company highlighted its role in the upcoming AI Agent Security Summit, where its VP of Security Strategy, Chris Hughes, will join a panel on AIUC-1, an emerging standard for AI agent security.

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The summit programming also includes a live incident response simulation for AI agents, led by Slalom experts, aimed at illustrating how security events unfold across an agent’s lifecycle. These initiatives position Zenity as a thought leader in AI security operations, governance, and best practices at a time when enterprises are grappling with autonomous AI deployment.

Zenity also announced its inclusion in the AWS Security Hub Extended plan, integrating its AI agent security tools directly into Amazon’s cloud security ecosystem. The integration offers continuous discovery and posture management for AI agents across SaaS, cloud, and endpoints, with native support for Amazon Bedrock AgentCore and real-time detection of prompt injection and unauthorized memory access.

By consolidating AI agent security findings alongside cloud, identity, and endpoint data inside AWS Security Hub, Zenity is aiming to make AI risk monitoring part of existing enterprise security workflows. This alignment with AWS could broaden Zenity’s reach among large customers and embed its capabilities in budgeted cloud security operations.

The company further emphasized regulatory readiness with promotions for an AMA on the EU AI Act and its implications for agentic AI systems. Zenity framed the event around compliance, visibility, and governance, signaling that its offerings and thought leadership are being tailored to European regulatory requirements.

Complementing these efforts, Zenity spotlighted a CISO-focused guide on the “authorization gap” in AI agent security and introduced a five-signal framework for intent-aware runtime controls, along with governance metrics such as a proposed “least agency ratio.” Taken together, the week’s activity suggests Zenity is tightening its focus on AI agent security, regulatory-aligned governance, and ecosystem integrations to support its long-term commercial prospects.

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