Unused SaaS licenses are a budget drain and a security risk. The need to easily track and manage SaaS licenses and identify unused ones is a challenge that every modern organization faces.
AI-assisted development crossed the “cool demo” threshold long ago. It is now a daily workflow. Generate code. Refactor. Run tests. Spin up infrastructure. Deploy.
Developers are moving faster than ever with AI. Cursor is redefining how software gets built, and 1Password is redefining how teams secure access to SaaS and AI. Today, we are announcing a new integration that brings these two worlds together in a way that keeps development speed high and credential risk near zero.
Anthropic recently announced that the company has disrupted the first reported AI-orchestrated cyber espionage campaign. This attack used Claude Code to automate many steps, with AI handling up to 90% of the tasks, including web searches and the autonomous writing of exploit code. The attackers bypassed Claude’s guardrails by breaking each step into small tasks and role-playing as a red team member.
There’s a good chance something important is missing from your IT team’s offboarding checklist, and it may be causing a steady drip of unnecessary, wasted spend. The source of this leak? No, it’s not the unreturned laptops; it’s the licenses for SaaS apps that employees use every day.
This year has been one of the most transformative in our collaboration with AWS. As organizations move faster toward AI-driven development and cloud-native architectures, secure access has become a foundational requirement, not an afterthought.
AI-powered browsers are transforming how people use the internet. They help you move faster, automate tasks, and simplify how you operate on the web. As this innovation continues, 1Password is committed to meeting our customers wherever they are in their AI journey. That means giving you the confidence to explore new AI tools, without sacrificing the security, privacy, or ease of use you depend on. And today, that includes OpenAI’s new ChatGPT Atlas browser.
The 1Password browser extension is entering its eighth year of service, and quite a bit has changed over that time as we’ve built new capabilities and improvements. One crucial piece of the browser extension is its in-page notification system. With the ability to display a notification on a web page, it allows you to perform many important tasks.
Security leaders are under pressure to manage an expanding number of SaaS apps and shadow IT. Automation transforms the fight for visibility into a framework of continuous monitoring.