All news with #prisma browser tag
Tue, December 9, 2025
Why AI Security Requires an Integrated Platform and Governance
🔒 Gartner and Palo Alto Networks argue that AI security must be treated as a platform problem to manage accelerating generative AI risk, cost and complexity. The post recommends a two‑phase path: start with AI usage control to govern third‑party GenAI consumption, then extend protections into AI application development and runtime. Prisma Browser, Prisma SASE and Prisma AIRS are presented as the integrated tooling to discover, govern and protect AI usage and models. Palo Alto highlights Unit 42, Huntr and autonomous red teaming as sources of continuous validation.
Thu, December 4, 2025
Securing the AI Frontier: GSA OneGov Accelerates Secure AI
🔒 Palo Alto Networks explains why the GSA OneGov agreement matters for federal AI adoption and cybersecurity. Author Eric Trexler cites Unit 42 research showing new risks—particularly AI Agent Smuggling via indirect prompt injection and agent session smuggling—and argues AI must be defended as an attack surface. The post highlights platform protections including Prisma AIRS, FedRAMP High CNAPP, and Prisma SASE to secure AI workloads, edge users, and data. It positions OneGov as a procurement shortcut for agencies to deploy AI securely and notes promotional offers through 31 January 2028.
Wed, December 3, 2025
Browser Defense Playbook: Securing the New Work Center
🛡️ Unit 42’s Browser Defense Playbook warns that modern work happens primarily in the browser—about 85% of daily tasks—and that attackers increasingly exploit that centrality with phishing, malicious extensions, drive-by downloads and session hijacks. The guide identifies common failures such as unmanaged extensions, lax policies and blind spots in encrypted traffic. It recommends extending zero trust to the browser with strong MFA, conditional access, continuous monitoring and vetted extension allow lists, and points to Prisma Browser for agentless inspection and DLP.
Tue, October 28, 2025
AI-Powered, Quantum-Ready Network Security Platform
🔒 Palo Alto Networks presents a unified, AI-driven approach to network security that consolidates browser, AI, and quantum defenses into the Strata Network Security Platform. New offerings include Prisma Browser, a SASE-native secure browser that blocks evasive attacks and brings LLM-augmented data classification to the endpoint, and Prisma AIRS 2.0, a full-lifecycle AI security platform. The company also outlines a pragmatic path to quantum-readiness and centralizes control with Strata Cloud Manager to simplify operations across hybrid environments.
Wed, October 15, 2025
Prisma Browser Enables Essential Eight-Aligned Controls
🔒 Prisma Browser is a cloud-delivered secure enterprise browser that extends policy-aligned controls to all web sessions regardless of device or location. It isolates workspaces and enforces last-mile identity, data and threat protections, integrating with Prisma Access and Cloud Delivered Security Services powered by Precision AI. Assessed to IRAP PROTECTED, it is positioned to help Australian government and regulated organisations implement Essential Eight-aligned controls without deploying endpoint agents.
Thu, September 18, 2025
Palo Alto Acknowledges Browser-Malware Risks, Validates LMR
🔍 SquareX’s Last Mile Reassembly (LMR) research, disclosed at DEF CON 32, shows how attackers split and reassemble malware inside the browser to evade Secure Web Gateways (SWGs). Palo Alto Networks has become the first major SASE vendor to publicly acknowledge this class of browser-assembled evasive attacks and announced enhancements to Prisma Browser. SquareX says LMR and related Data Splicing techniques exploit channels like WebRTC and gRPC, bypassing traditional SWG and DLP controls and underscoring the need for browser-native security.