The recognition highlights CrowdStrike’s Falcon Next-Gen Identity Security platform, which has surpassed $520 million in ending annual recurring revenue, marking a 34% year-over-year growth. Analysts pointed to the platform’s ability to treat all users as potentially privileged, effectively eliminating standing privileges in favor of just-in-time access. This approach allows security teams to monitor how AI and SaaS agents interact with sensitive systems, revoking permissions dynamically as threat conditions evolve.
Elia Zaitsev, chief technology officer at CrowdStrike, noted that modern enterprise security faces a new frontier where AI agents operate with high-privilege access to critical data. By integrating identity as a primary security signal alongside endpoint and cloud telemetry, the platform enables automated responses—such as batch remediation of risky accounts or password resets—via SOAR workflows. Frost & Sullivan concluded that the company’s ability to translate complex digital megatrends into a unified, cloud-native product strategy provides a distinct competitive advantage in the current threat landscape.
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