Agentic browsers introduce new security and governance considerations. Agents acting on behalf of users often access sensitive information–such as banking details or healthcare records–that wouldn’t typically be exposed in a standard browsing session. Because agents can autonomously interact with web pages and submit data, risks include unintended data exposure, prompt injection attacks, and reduced visibility into automated activity.
From an organizational standpoint, this makes it important to detect when agentic browsers are interacting with sensitive workflows and to apply appropriate monitoring and validation. This level of visibility depends on having access to detailed behavioral and request-level data, rather than relying on aggregated analytics summaries.