LayerX
About LayerX
LayerX is an AI and browser security company that offers an agentless security platform designed to secure last-mile user interactions across AI, SaaS, and web applications. The platform integrates with any commercial or AI browser to provide real-time visibility and enforcement for AI usage, browser extensions, and shadow SaaS, helping organizations control data leakage and enforce security policies without network changes. Focused on enterprise environments, LayerX emphasizes comprehensive browser-native protection, guardrails for GenAI tools, and BYOD-friendly deployment to reduce security gaps across modern workspaces.
Recent News
Akamai to Acquire AI and Browser Security Firm LayerX for $205 Million
Flaw in Claude’s Chrome Extension Allowed ‘Any’ Other Plugin to Hijack Victims’ AI
The Buyer’s Guide to AI Usage Control
New AI Usage Report: Enterprise AI Risk Is Heavily Concentrated Among a Small Group of AI "Power Users"
‘AiFrame’ Browser Attacks Continue with Fake Authenticator, Converter Extensions
Akamai to Acquire LayerX for $205 Million, Boosting AI Usage‑Control Capabilities
Fake TikTok Downloaders on Chrome and Edge Spying on 130,000 Users
This Free Privacy Tool Makes It Super Easy to See Which Sites Are Selling Your Data
Flaw in Anthropic Claude Extensions Can Lead to RCE in Google Calendar: LayerX
ClaudeBleed Allows Any Chrome Extension to Hijack Anthropic’s Claude AI Agent
Startup Trends Shaking Up Browsers, SOC Automation, AppSec
260K+ Chrome Users Duped by Fake AI Browser Extensions
Vulnerability in Claude Extension for Chrome Exposes AI Agent to Takeover
Akamai to Buy LayerX for $205 M, Adding AI‑driven Zero‑Trust to Its Portfolio
NTT DATA Signs Deal to Acquire WinWire, Adding 1,000 Azure Engineers
Google Fixes CVSS 10 Gemini CLI CI RCE and Cursor Flaws Enable Code Execution
ChatGPhish Vulnerability Turns ChatGPT Web Summaries Into a Phishing Surface
Browser Extensions Are the New AI Consumption Channel That No One Is Talking About
Akamai to Buy LayerX for AI Browser Security
Valid Certificates, Stolen Accounts: How Attackers Broke Npm's Last Trust Signal