Site icon Converge Digest

Versa Expands SASE with AI Controls and Data Protection

Versa Networks introduced a series of enhancements to its Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) platform, focused on securing AI-driven applications, protecting sensitive data flows, and extending policy enforcement across distributed enterprise environments. The updates reflect a broader shift toward treating AI workloads—not just users and devices—as first-class entities in network security architecture.

At the core of Versa’s announcements is an expansion of its AI-aware security capabilities, designed to provide visibility and control over generative AI (GenAI) application usage across enterprise networks. The platform now includes mechanisms to identify, classify, and enforce policies on traffic associated with AI services, including both public GenAI platforms and internally deployed AI models. This enables enterprises to manage risks such as data leakage, unauthorized AI usage, and exposure of proprietary information through prompt-based interactions.

Versa also introduced enhancements to its data protection framework, extending data loss prevention (DLP) and inline inspection capabilities to AI-driven workflows. These updates allow organizations to monitor how sensitive data is accessed, processed, and transmitted within AI pipelines, including interactions between users, applications, and AI services. The company emphasized the importance of securing not just endpoints, but the full data lifecycle across AI-enabled environments.

A third area of focus is the extension of SASE policy enforcement to support distributed AI applications operating across cloud, edge, and branch locations. Versa’s platform integrates networking and security controls to ensure consistent policy enforcement regardless of where AI workloads are deployed. This includes support for zero trust access models applied to AI applications and service-to-service communications, as well as improved visibility into application behavior across hybrid infrastructure.

In addition, Versa highlighted updates to its analytics and observability capabilities, providing deeper insights into AI-related traffic patterns and potential security risks. These tools are designed to help security teams understand how AI applications are being used across the organization and to identify anomalous behavior that may indicate misuse or compromise.

“AI is reshaping enterprise traffic patterns and introducing new data security risks that traditional architectures were not designed to handle,” said Kelly Ahuja, CEO of Versa Networks. “Versa’s AI-native SASE platform provides the visibility, control and protection enterprises need to safely adopt AI across distributed environments.”

Key Points

🌐 Analysis

Versa’s announcements highlight how SASE platforms are evolving to address AI as a new class of workload. Rather than focusing solely on users and devices, security architectures must now account for AI services and agents that dynamically access and process data across distributed environments.

The broader implication is that network security platforms are becoming control planes for both connectivity and data governance. As enterprises scale AI deployments, the ability to enforce consistent policy across AI data flows, applications, and infrastructure will be a key differentiator for SASE and zero trust vendors.

Exit mobile version