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Home / Technology / Okta Proposes Standard to Control AI Agent Permissions

Okta Proposes Standard to Control AI Agent Permissions

17 Dec

•

Summary

  • New standard aims to grant organizations control over AI agent permissions.
  • Current OAuth tokens may be insufficient for AI agent access.
  • Okta's IAAG standard seeks to involve organizations in access decisions.
Okta Proposes Standard to Control AI Agent Permissions

The rapid rise of AI agents, projected to be commonplace by 2026, presents significant security challenges for organizations. As these agents gain access to corporate resources, existing permission systems may prove inadequate. Identity management provider Okta is championing a new open standard, known as Identity Assertion Authorization Grant (IAAG), designed to address this emerging threat.

The proposed IAAG standard aims to close security loopholes by ensuring that organizations, through their identity and access management (IAM) systems, have oversight of permissions granted to AI agents. This contrasts with the current OAuth token system, where individual users often grant access, creating potential blind spots and security risks for corporate data.

Supported by early adopters like Google, Amazon, and Salesforce, IAAG seeks to empower IT managers with greater visibility and control. Microsoft has also announced plans to support the standard in its Entra cloud IAM solution, signaling broad industry interest in securing the future of AI-driven operations.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
IAAG (Identity Assertion Authorization Grant) is a proposed open standard by Okta to give organizations more control and visibility over permissions granted to AI agents accessing corporate resources.
Current OAuth tokens were not designed for the scale and autonomy of AI agents, potentially creating security blind spots for organizations by leaving access decisions solely to end-users.
Early adopters and supporters include Google, Amazon, Salesforce, Zoom, Box, and Microsoft, indicating a broad industry move towards enhanced AI security.

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