
By securing AI‑driven development pipelines, the acquisition reduces compliance risk and accelerates the adoption of autonomous coding agents across regulated enterprises.
The rapid rise of coding agents such as Claude Code, Cursor and Codex has transformed how software is built, but it also exposes enterprises to new security vulnerabilities. When an AI agent can push code, open pull requests, or modify production configurations, traditional human‑in‑the‑loop controls become bottlenecks. Keycard’s platform addresses this gap by issuing short‑lived, task‑specific credentials that decouple identity from any particular tool, ensuring that each agent action is traceable and governed by policy.
Anchor.dev’s core competency lies in automating the lifecycle of TLS certificates—issuing, validating, and renewing them without manual intervention. By folding this capability into Keycard’s identity framework, developers gain a unified, protocol‑agnostic layer that automatically secures both human and agent interactions across APIs, command‑line interfaces, and custom tooling. The acquisition also brings seasoned engineers who have delivered infrastructure for Cloudflare, GitHub and Heroku, accelerating Keycard’s roadmap for production‑grade controls and auditability.
For the broader market, this move signals a maturation of AI‑agent governance, shifting the narrative from experimental pilots to enterprise‑ready solutions. Companies can now delegate routine development tasks to autonomous agents while retaining explicit human sign‑off for high‑impact changes, balancing speed with compliance. As AI agents become the default development paradigm, platforms that provide granular, automated identity and audit mechanisms—like the newly expanded Keycard—will likely become a prerequisite for secure, scalable adoption.
Keycard Labs Inc., an AI agent identity startup, announced the acquisition of security certificate management startup Anchor.dev. The deal brings Anchor.dev's team and technology into Keycard, enhancing its platform for short‑lived, task‑based credentials and per‑action auditability for AI‑driven development. The acquisition expands Keycard's capabilities in securing autonomous software agents.
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