Ping Identity extends Runtime Identity for AI agents across AWS, Google Cloud and Cloudflare

0

Ping Identity has announced new integrations with Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud and Cloudflare aimed at extending its “Runtime Identity” capabilities into cloud and edge environments where AI agents are built, deployed and operated.

The company said the integrations are designed to support continuous authorisation and policy enforcement for AI agents operating across distributed environments. It said security teams need visibility into what AI agents can access and what actions they perform, with controls applied in real time.

“Organisations want to move faster with AI, but they can’t afford to lose visibility or control as AI agents begin operating autonomously across cloud and edge environments,” said Andre Durand, CEO and founder of Ping Identity. “These integrations help bring continuous authorisation and real-time policy enforcement into the environments where AI agents are being built and deployed.”

Ping Identity said AI agents are expected to move across cloud workloads and interact with APIs, agent gateways, Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers, and services at the edge, rather than remaining within a single platform or identity boundary. The company said it is extending identity enforcement “closer to the point of action” to help organisations maintain governance and monitoring as agent-based operations scale.

In AWS environments, Ping Identity said it supports securing AI agents built on services including Amazon Bedrock AgentCore and broader automation workloads, with a focus on establishing agent identities, enforcing least-privilege delegated access, and aligning behaviour with enterprise policies. Hart Rossman, VP of Security and Infrastructure at AWS, said: “Production AI workloads require identity and authorisation controls that can adapt dynamically as agents interact across cloud environments.”

For Google Cloud, Ping Identity said it integrates PingOne Authorize with Google Cloud Agent Gateway to secure and govern agent and tool traffic across network paths, including applying policies across interactions with MCP tools and downstream APIs.

With Cloudflare, Ping Identity said it is extending identity enforcement to the edge for AI agent traffic interacting with public and private data and distributed infrastructure. Tom Evans, chief partner officer at Cloudflare, said: “Identity and Zero Trust are key to maintaining visibility and control as organisations deploy AI agents across distributed environments.”

The announcement is positioned within Ping Identity’s broader “Identity for AI” strategy, which the company said is intended to help organisations establish trusted identities and governance controls for AI agents operating across distributed environments.

Share.