CrowdStrike Unveils New Agentic Security Platform For ‘Deeper Layer Of Autonomy’: CTO
The cybersecurity giant is also introducing new AI agents with the launch of its Agentic Security Workforce offering.
CrowdStrike debuted a new agentic security platform to drive a higher degree of autonomy for cybersecurity teams along with new AI agents across its Falcon platform, in a pair of announcements Tuesday signaling where the security giant is heading next on AI.
The newly announced Falcon Agentic Security Platform offers an “AI-ready” data layer that enables the expansion of agentic functionality on CrowdStrike’s platform, ultimately providing faster and more effective responses to threats, according to the company.
[Related: CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz: ‘Huge Service Opportunity’ Ahead For Partners]
In a briefing with media outlets including CRN, CrowdStrike CTO Elia Zaitsev said the company’s Agentic Security Platform is the next major step in making the Security Operations Center (SOC) more autonomous.
“Now we’re heading into an even deeper layer of autonomy where we are really after what we call the agentic SOC,” Zaitsev (pictured) said during the briefing with media. “We want multiple agents working orchestrated in an ensemble fashion, to progressively automate more and more aspects of what a human analyst does today.”
Key capabilities include an Enterprise Graph that unifies telemetry data from across an organization, enabling that data to be more easily leveraged by both AI and human analysts through a common query language.
The Agentic Security Platform has “huge implications for human analysts [through] simplifying their workflows, their ability to work with all this complex, powerful data,” Zaitsev said.
Meanwhile, CrowdStrike also introduced a new set of AI agents through the launch Tuesday of its Agentic Security Workforce offering.
The offering provides security analysts with “out-of-the-box capabilities to automate more and more of these steps, more and more of these specific tasks,” Zaitsev said.
The initial agents are aimed at going beyond chatbot-based copilots by handling key security workflows across a number of Falcon modules, CrowdStrike said.
The agents can be utilized to provide exposure prioritization (in Falcon Exposure Management), malware analysis (in Falcon Threat Intelligence) and threat hunting (in Falcon Threat Intelligence), the company said.
Additional agents are being introduced in Falcon Next-Gen SIEM, including agents for search analysis, correlation rule generation, data transformation and workflow generation, according to CrowdStrike.
As part of the announcements Tuesday, CrowdStrike also debuted Charlotte AI AgentWorks, which is a no-code platform for building, testing, deploying and orchestrating security agents.
Charlotte AI AgentWorks thus allows partners and customers to build and deploy “their own agentic systems with their own custom datasets and enterprise or organizational specific knowledge baked into it,” Zaitsev said.
The announcements came in connection with CrowdStrike’s Fal.Con 2025 conference, which is being held this week in Las Vegas.
Speaking to top partners at the conference Monday, CrowdStrike Co-founder and CEO George Kurtz said that the company’s offerings around agentic and products such as Next-Gen SIEM are accelerating opportunities for partners to deliver services.
The adoption of agentic, meanwhile, also creates opportunities for delivery of security in areas such as identity, Kurtz said. Most of the identities associated with agentic are non-human and often will need to have access to data, compute and workflows, he said.
As for Next-Gen SIEM, “it does represent a huge opportunity from a market perspective for our partners, and a huge service opportunity,” Kurtz said Monday during CrowdStrike’s 2025 Partner Summit.