AIBound expands Guardian to let security teams control Shadow AI

4 hours ago

By AI, Created 7:36 PM UTC, May 28, 2026, /AGP/ – AIBound on May 29, 2026 said it has added new capabilities to Guardian, its AI security product, to help enterprises move from simply seeing Shadow AI to approving, enforcing and reporting on it. The update comes as CISOs face faster AI adoption, rising prompt injection attacks and an expanding attack surface across tools, models and agents.

Why it matters: - AIBound’s expanded Guardian aims to give security teams control over Shadow AI before unauthorized tools affect enterprise operations. - The company is pitching the update as a response to a shift in enterprise security, where visibility alone is no longer enough. - AIBound says the new capabilities help CISOs move from discovery to enforcement across AI use in the enterprise.

What happened: - AIBound announced expanded capabilities for Guardian, the company’s flagship product, on May 29, 2026. - The announcement follows AIBound’s exit from stealth at the RSA Conference in March. - AIBound said the update is designed to help security teams respond to Shadow AI rather than only detect it. - CEO Niall Browne said the new functionality gives security teams the control they need to keep pace with Shadow AI.

The details: - Guardian includes a real-time Control Plane and a risk registry that profiles more than 50,000 AI apps. - The platform supports continuous discovery, programmatic approval, automated enforcement and executive reporting. - AIBound says its Control Plane secures local models, AI containers, MCP servers, AI agents, browser extensions, developer tooling and inference services in one system. - The company said it is already deployed inside enterprises in healthcare, finance, HR and technology across the U.S. and Europe. - Browne said AI adoption is outpacing governance. - Browne also said static policy cannot keep up with AI. - AIBound said prompt injection attacks are up 340% year over year. - AIBound cited an IBM estimate that the average shadow-AI breach costs enterprises $4.63 million. - Browne said AIBound estimates that for every 1,000 employees, 269 shadow AI tools are running without permission.

Between the lines: - The announcement positions AIBound against a familiar enterprise security problem: tools spread faster than policy can catch up. - The focus on approval, enforcement and reporting suggests the company is moving beyond discovery into operational control. - The broad list of covered AI assets shows AIBound is targeting the full stack of employee, developer and infrastructure-level AI use. - Browne’s CISO background at Palo Alto Networks and Workday adds credibility to the company’s security message.

What’s next: - Gartner Security and Risk Summit attendees can meet with Browne and see a live demo of Guardian’s expanded capabilities at booth #651 from June 1-3, 2026. - AIBound said interested attendees can schedule a conversation at the event. - The company is continuing to position Guardian as a control layer for secure AI adoption as enterprises expand AI use.

The bottom line: - AIBound is trying to turn Shadow AI from an unmanaged risk into a governed workflow, with discovery, approval and enforcement in one product.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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