Fingerprint Launches Signed AI Agent Ecosystem To Identify Authorized Agentic AI on the Web

  • Digital Identity
  • 04.02.2026 08:15 am

Fingerprint, a leader in device intelligence for fraud prevention, today announced the launch of Authorized AI Agent Detection, its new ecosystem of signed AI agents, including OpenAI, AWS AgentCore, Browserbase, Manus and Anchor Browser. The ecosystem enables enterprises to detect authorized agentic AI traffic with 100% certainty, allowing organizations to distinguish trusted, permissioned automation from malicious bots and scrapers.

As AI agents account for a growing share of automated web traffic, organizations face a fundamental shift in how they evaluate digital interactions. Traditional “block all bots” approaches treat all automation as a threat, often breaking legitimate workflows while still leaving businesses exposed to fraud and abuse. At the same time, allowing unauthorized automation can introduce serious security and revenue risks.

“For years, the goal was simply to stop the bots, but that's a losing strategy as an increasing number of interactions are becoming automated,” said Valentin Vasilyev, CTO and co-founder of Fingerprint. “The real challenge now is determining whether traffic is legitimate. We built this ecosystem so businesses can stop blindly blocking visitors. Instead, they can now start identifying every visitor, whether they are a malicious bot, an authorized agent or a human. In the AI era, companies that are able to differentiate trusted visitors from suspicious ones will retain their competitive edge.”

Fingerprint’s Authorized AI Agent Detection gives organizations visibility into who—or what—is interacting with their digital properties. Customers can determine whether an AI agent visitor is authorized or not, and apply controls based on visitor identification rather than relying on generic bot detection alone. This implementation aligns with emerging open standards for AI agent verification and authentication.

“Open Internet protocols mature through real-world deployment,” said Thibault Meunier, research engineer at Cloudflare and creator of Web Bot Auth. “Operating them at scale is how we validate assumptions, surface edge cases and improve the standard. Cloudflare welcomes Fingerprint's implementation of AI agent verification and its participation in the IETF standardization process, which helps accelerate practical outcomes for the ecosystem.”

Building Infrastructure for the Agentic Economy

Fingerprint’s new ecosystem supports real-world AI agent use cases while reinforcing fraud prevention across industries:

  • Enterprise automation: AI agents built on platforms such as Manus can access permissioned environments, such as PitchBook, Financial Times or CRM systems, to analyze data without being flagged as a threat.

  • Logistics transparency: Using Browserbase, freight carriers can verify automated queries for tracking and delivery updates, allowing legitimate supply chain tools to operate while keeping malicious scrapers at bay.

  • Revenue protection: E-commerce and fintech leaders can now selectively permit AI agents to facilitate transactions, creating a frictionless path for agentic buyers while maintaining robust defenses against account takeover (ATO) and payment fraud.

“Businesses want the upside of AI agents, faster support, automated operations, and smoother buying experiences but they can’t afford to open the door to scrapers and fraud,” shared Paul Klein, CEO and Founder of Browserbase. “This collaboration makes ‘agent identity’ a first-class concept on the web, so companies can confidently permit trusted agents while blocking the rest.”

"Anchor Browser makes automating real work easier than ever before,” said Idan Raman, CEO of Anchor Browser. “Our partnership with Fingerprint is another step in the right direction by letting agents be deployed reliably and securely anywhere on the web.

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