Events
,
RSAC Conference
,
RSAC Conference Videos
Palo Alto Networks’ Nikesh Arora: Browser Security Will Surpass EDR in Importance
Securing AI systems requires continuous scanning, red teaming and bidirectional inspection – a departure from traditional security methods that only monitor incoming data streams, said Nikesh Arora, chairman and CEO of Palo Alto Networks.
See Also: AI vs. AI: The New Cybersecurity Battlefield
As enterprises rush to deploy AI across operations, Palo Alto Networks is securing models and agents through its platform approach. The company recently acquired Protect AI, a Seattle-based startup focused on AI security, adding critical capabilities to its existing AI firewall and security platform.
The urgency for consolidated security platforms stems from the rapid evolution of AI threats and the need to respond at machine speed. “The cost of fragmentation is friction. Friction causes time delay, latency. Latency is the enemy of real-time cybersecurity,” Arora said. “If bad actors are going to use the same models to do what they do, you got to be able to respond to them in real time.”
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group at RSAC Conference 2025, Arora also discussed:
- Consolidating cloud security and SecOps on a single platform improves threat response workflows;
- The shift toward browsers becoming the primary interface for SaaS applications in an AI-driven future;
- How organizations can implement proactive ML and automation strategies to predict and prevent attacks.
Arora has spearheaded Palo Alto Networks’ transformation into a preferred partner for enterprises and governments worldwide. He has worked in senior leadership roles at SoftBank Group and Google.