• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Cybersecurity Market

Cybersecurity Technologies & Markets

  • Cybersecurity Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Market Reports
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

SquareX Reveals that Employees are No Longer the Weakest Link, Browser AI Agents Are

June 30, 2025 By CyberNewswire Leave a Comment

Palo Alto, California, June 30th, 2025, CyberNewsWire

Every security practitioner knows that employees are the weakest link in an organization, but this is no longer the case. SquareX’s research reveals that Browser AI Agents are more likely to fall prey to cyberattacks than employees, making them the new weakest link that enterprise security teams need to look out for. 

Browser AI Agents are software applications that act on behalf of users to access and interact with web content. Users can instruct these agents to automate browser-based tasks such as flight bookings, scheduling meetings, sending emails, and even simple research tasks. The productivity gains that Browser AI Agents provide make them an extremely compelling tool for employees and organizations alike. Indeed, a survey from PWC found that 79% of organizations have already adopted browser agents today. 

Yet, Browser AI Agents expose organizations to a massive security risk. These agents are trained to complete the tasks they are instructed to do, with little to no understanding of the security implications of their actions. Unlike human employees, Browser AI Agents are not subject to regular security awareness training. They cannot recognize visual warning signs like suspicious URLs, excessive permission requests, or unusual website designs that typically alert employees of a malicious site. Consequently, Browser AI Agents are more likely to fall prey to browser-based attacks than even a regular employee. Even if it is possible for users to add these guardrails, the overhead required to extensively write the security risk of every task performed by the agent in every prompt would probably outweigh the productivity gains. More importantly, employees using Browser AI Agents are unlikely to have enough security expertise to be able to write such a prompt in the first place.  

With the popular open-source Browser Use framework used by thousands of organizations, SquareX demonstrated how the Browser AI Agent, instructed to find and register for a file-sharing tool, succumbed to an OAuth attack. In the process of completing its task, it granted a malicious app complete access to the user’s email despite multiple suspicious signals – irrelevant permissions, unfamiliar brands, suspicious URLs – that likely would have stopped most employees from granting these permissions. In other scenarios, these agents might expose the user’s credit card information to a phishing site while trying to purchase groceries or disclose sensitive data when responding to emails from an impersonation attack. 

Unfortunately, neither browsers nor traditional security tools can differentiate between actions performed by users and these agents. Thus, it is critical for enterprises working with Browser AI Agents to provide browser-native guardrails that will prevent agents and employees alike from falling prey to these attacks.

Vivek Ramachandran, Founder & CEO of SquareX, warns, “The arrival of Browser AI Agents have dethroned employees as the weakest link within organizations. Optimistically, these agents have the security awareness of an average employee, making them vulnerable to even the most basic attacks, let alone bleeding-edge ones. Critically, these Browser AI Agents are running on behalf of the user, with the same privilege level to access enterprise resources. Until the day browsers develop native guardrails for Browser AI Agents, enterprises must incorporate browser-native solutions like Browser Detection and Response to prevent these agents from being tricked into performing malicious tasks. Eventually, the new generation of identity and access management tools will also have to take into account Browser AI Agent identities to implement granular access controls on agentic workflows.”

To learn more about this security research, users can visit http://sqrx.com/browser-ai-agents .

SquareX’s research team is also holding a webinar on July 11, 10am PT/1pm ET to dive deeper into the research findings. To register, users can click here. 

About SquareX

SquareX’s browser extension turns any browser on any device into an enterprise-grade secure browser. SquareX’s industry-first Browser Detection and Response (BDR) solution empowers organizations to proactively detect, mitigate, and threat-hunt client-side web attacks, including malicious browser extensions, advanced spearphishing, browser-native ransomware, genAI DLP, and more. Unlike legacy security approaches and cumbersome enterprise browsers, SquareX seamlessly integrates with users’ existing consumer browsers, ensuring enhanced security without compromising user experience or productivity. By delivering unparalleled visibility and control directly within the browser, SquareX enables security leaders to reduce their attack surface, gain actionable intelligence, and strengthen their enterprise cybersecurity posture against the newest threat vector – the browser. Find out more on www.sqrx.com.

Contact

Head of PR
Junice Liew
SquareX
[email protected]

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • ShinyHunters Breaches Canvas LMS, Threatening Data on 275 Million Users
  • NETSCOUT FY2026: Revenue Growth, Margin Expansion, and a Balance Sheet That Tells the Real Story
  • Day Zero Threat Research Summit, August 30–September 1, 2026, Las Vegas
  • AI Agent Security Summit, May 27, 2026, San Francisco
  • General Analysis Raises $10 Million to Secure the Fast-Rising World of AI Agents
  • Black Hat Asia 2026, Singapore: Cybersecurity Event Highlights AI Threats and Data Sovereignty
  • Aptori Expands Runtime-Driven Validation Platform for the AI Coding Era
  • Rilian Raises $17.5 Million to Bring Agentic AI Into Cybersecurity and Sovereign Defense
  • ServiceNow Completes $7.75 Billion Armis Acquisition, Expands AI Security Ambitions
  • Enterprise WiFi Security: Where Convenience Stops and Control Begins

Media Partners

  • Defense Market
  • Technologies.org
  • Technology Conferences
Israel Approves F-35 and F-15IA Squadron Purchases Worth Tens of Billions
DEFSEC Pushes Battlefield Awareness Forward with BLISS Deployment to Yuma
Farnborough International Airshow 2026, July 20–24, Farnborough, England
6K Energy and CRG Defense Form Seven-Year Pact to Build U.S. Defense Battery Supply Chain
Boeing MQ-25A Stingray First Operational Flight Advances U.S. Navy Carrier Aviation
L3Harris Secures $1 Billion Pentagon-Style Backing Ahead of Missile Solutions IPO
DFEN Unwinds the War Premium
The Industrial Gap Behind Europe’s Rearmament Numbers
WiFi in the Military: Convenience Meets a Very Different Kind of Reality
ATARS Meets the M-346: Why Leonardo and Red 6 May Be Rewriting the Logic of Fighter Training
Quantum Motion Raises $160 Million Series C to Scale Silicon-Based Quantum Computing
Fazeshift Raises $17 Million Series A to Automate Accounts Receivable With Autonomous AI Agents
Instant Power Becomes the Next AI Infrastructure Battleground as Nyobolt Raises $60 Million
NVIDIA and Corning Expand U.S. Optical Manufacturing for AI Infrastructure
QuantWare Raises $178 Million Series B, Announces 10,000-Qubit Processor Architecture
Panthalassa Raises $140 Million to Power AI Computing with Ocean Waves
JEDEC Advances DDR5 MRDIMM Architecture With New MDB Standard and Next-Gen Memory Roadmap
Hydrogen Embrittlement and Pipeline Infrastructure: The Metal Problem No One Wants to Talk About
Hydrogen Policy in the United States: Decades of Investment, Uncertain Direction
Hydrogen and Grid Resilience: The Long-Duration Storage Problem
Technology Investor Conference Circuit, May–June 2026
Automate 2026 Sets Its Agenda Around AI’s Role in Industrial Transformation, June 22–25, 2026, McCormick Place in Chicago
IBM Think 2026, May 5–8, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
AI & Creativity Summit New York 2026, May 14, The Lighthouse Brooklyn
SEMICON Southeast Asia 2026, May 5–7, Kuala Lumpur
SID Display Week 2026, May 3–8, Los Angeles Convention Center
Big Dipper Innovation Summit, May 12–14, 2026, Richmond
RISC-V Summit Europe 2026, June 8–12, Bologna, Italy
Data Center World 2027, May 24–27 2027, Music City Center, Nashville, Tennessee
Snowflake Summit 26, June 1–4, 2026, San Francisco

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Market Research Media
  • Analysis.org
Why Memory Prices Won’t Come Down
The Bill Comes Due
The Software-Defined Camera Won. The Open OS Did Not.
Cars Are Computers Now, and Most Carmakers Aren’t
Gartner: Global IT Spending to Hit $6.31 Trillion in 2026, Driven by AI Infrastructure
The SDK Generator Benchmarks: Infrastructure vs. Convenience
Infographic: We Are Likely in the Early Stages of Another Productivity Boom
Infographic: Establishing the National Multimodal Freight Network
Global WiFi Market: Size, Segmentation, Trends, and Forecast to 2030
Synera’s $40M Series B: What the Press Release Isn’t Saying
China’s U.S. Treasury Holdings: The Great Repositioning (2021–2025)
Infographic: Why the 2025 CIPA Data Proves the APS-C Renaissance is Real
How WiFi Changed Media
Canva Acquires Simtheory and Ortto to Build End-to-End Work Platform
Netflix Price Hikes, The Economics of Dominance in a Saturated Streaming Market
America’s Brands Keep Winning Even as America Itself Slips
Kioxia’s Storage Gambit: Flash Steps Into the AI Memory Hierarchy
Mamdani Strangling New York
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Apple TV Arrives on The Roku Channel, Expanding the Streaming Platform Wars
Micron Crosses $700 Billion as AI Memory Shortage Rewrites the Valuation Floor
The Trade Desk Q1 2026: Revenue Growth Holds, But the Margin Story Is Compressing
Dropbox Q1 2026: Revenue Stabilization, Margin Compression, and the Debt-Funded Buyback Question
Cloudflare Grows 34%, Cuts 1,100 Jobs, and Watches Its Stock Decline 19% in After-Hours Trading
AI Didn’t Create the Layoffs. It Just Made Them Speakable.
AMD +20% Premarket — Sector Repricing, Not a One-Stock Event
GameStop Bids $56 Billion for eBay
Apple Delivers a Power Quarter as Growth Reaccelerates Across the Board
PayPal’s Reset Moment Feels Less Like a Shuffle and More Like a Bet on Focus
Reading the PEG Ratio Across Nvidia, Broadcom, and AMD

Copyright © 2026 CybersecurityMarket.com

Media Partners: Technologies · Market Analysis · Market Research · Photography · API Coding · App Coding · Blockchaining · Referently