AI security feels fragile right now — and in this episode, Ron Bennatan, VP of Strategy, AI and Database Security at Varonis and founder of Guardium, JSonar, and AllTrue.ai, explains exactly why.
Ron unpacks what "fragile" actually means in the context of AI: it's a black box that requires careful handling, is sensitive to pressure, and is being outpaced by change that isn't linear or polynomial — it's exponential. What took 30 years of AI development previously has been eclipsed by the last three months alone.
Drawing on 30 years in data security, Ron walks through how his journey from Guardium (structured data) to Varonis (historically unstructured data) represents a reunion that was always inevitable — because the policies and security motions were always the same, even when the industry split the two apart. Now, with AI agents becoming the dominant access pattern in the enterprise — potentially replacing 99% of traditional human-driven data access — the data layer is emerging as the most durable signal in AI security.
The conversation covers why the AllTrue.ai thesis — that consumability and bridging the governance/security divide are more important than the tools themselves — translated naturally into the Varonis platform. Ron also breaks down why least privilege is fundamentally harder with agents (the permissioning model can't be deterministic when the decision-making isn't), why agents being unaccountable — no salary, no fear of being fired — makes detective controls less effective, and why the industry must accelerate toward preventive controls and intent analysis operating at machine speed.
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