Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
,
Identity & Access Management
,
Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development
CEO Danny Brickman on Intent-Based Access and Non-Human Identity Governance

A non-human identity startup led by the ex-head of cyber R&D for the Israel Defense Forces raised $120 million to manage machines, services and artificial intelligence agents.
See Also: Proof of Concept: Bot or Buyer? Identity Crisis in Retail
The Craft Ventures-led Series B funding round will enable New York-based Oasis Security to replace legacy identity governance with automated, real-time governance that runs at machine speed continuously, said co-founder and CEO Danny Brickman. He said Oasis has expanded on visibility and posture analysis to governance and automation to help organizations manage and control identities at scale.
“The focus of Oasis was always to actually redefine the identity market,” Brickman told ISMG. “We understood pretty early on that the machines of the world are taking over, and our infrastructure was built for humans. So with that in mind, three and a half years ago, we took a path of focusing on non-human identities.”
Oasis Security, founded in 2022, employs 142 people and has raised $195 million, having last completed a $35 million Series A extension round in May 2024 led by Accel, Cyberstarts and Sequoia Capital. The firm has been led since its inception by Brickman, who spent more than seven years with the IDF, starting as a software engineer and moving up to head of cyber R&D, a position he held for nearly three years (see: Agentic AI Redefines Identity Security).
What Makes Oasis Different Than Legacy Identity Governance
Legacy identity governance tools rely on human oversight, periodic reviews and static enforcement, which Brickman said don’t scale in environments where thousands or millions of machine identities are dynamically created and modified. Oasis is targeting this gap by introducing automated governance capabilities that help enterprises manage identity at scale without relying on manual intervention.
“We invested the last three years to understand how to secure and support the identities,” Brickman said. “There are machine identities. There are non-human identities. The legacy stack was never taking any steps toward supporting the non-human era.”
The company initially focused on providing visibility into identity environments, Brickman said, helping organizations understand what identities exist, how they are connected and where risks lie. From there, Brickman said the platform expanded into governance and automation, enabling organizations to manage and control identities at scale.
“To create a strong identity platform, you need to have a lot of components that can help enterprises to actually replace their legacy stack,” Brickman said.
Instead of assigning static permissions based on predefined roles, Brickman said Oasis’ system dynamically determines what access an agent requires based on its stated objective. This approach aligns more closely with how modern AI systems operate but introduces new technical challenges, including interpreting intent accurately and translating it into secure, enforceable permissions, he said.
“Oasis is doing the same for agents today, in a single, policy-driven access layer that is controlling that access,” Brickman said.
Why a Single, Centralized Identity Provider No Longer Works
The idea of a single, centralized identity provider is no longer viable in modern enterprise environments, where multiple systems and platforms each maintain their own identity frameworks, Brickman said. Oasis instead acts as a unifying layer, Brickman said, allowing organizations to maintain their existing identity infrastructure while gaining centralized visibility and control over access policies.
“We’re leveraging the existing IDPs, the existing technology, the existing databases and allowing a normalized access to those systems in a single way,” Brickman said.
Oasis combines its non-human identity management capabilities with intent analysis and real-time auditing to create a closed-loop system for agentic access, which Brickman said ensures every action taken by an agent is both authorized and traceable. By joining intent analysis and identity governance, Oasis creates a comprehensive framework for managing agent-driven access across enterprise systems.
“What we’re actually replacing today is all the management and governance motion of identities in this new era,” Brickman said.
While many legacy vendors are now adding support for machine identities and AI agents, Brickman said Oasis’ platforms were originally designed for human-centric use cases. Retrofitting those systems to support intent-based, machine-driven access is significantly more complex than building for it from the ground up, which Brickman said gives Oasis a multi-year head start.
“Every Fortune 500 company is a potential Oasis customer,” Brickman said. “Oasis is going to be the identity platform of the future.”
