Endor Labs has expanded its AppSec platform by powering it with Agentic AI and a security dataset to identify risks, suggest remediations, and apply fixes automatically.

"We're in the middle of the software development revolution. Until recently, 80% of code came from open source. Moving forward, 80% will be generated by AI. That future isn't far off—it's already reshaping how software gets built today, " said Varun Badhwar, co-founder and CEO of Endor Labs.
"Everyone's building AI agents, but most are just wrappers around LLMs. What makes our agents powerful is the data underneath. We've spent years building the security dataset the industry needs to make AI useful for AppSec teams," Badhwar added.
Agentic AI
The platform provides dedicated AI agents that are explicitly built for application security, acting as developers, architects, and security engineers to review code, identify risks, and recommend precise fixes.
Endor Labs deploys multiple AI agents to review every pull request (PR) for architectural changes affecting security that fall outside the scope of legacy Static Application Security Testing (SAST) and vulnerability scanning tools.
MCP Plugin for Cursor
The MCP plugin claims to seamlessly integrate security into AI-native tools like Cursor and GitHub Copilot. It scans code as it's written, flags risks, and helps developers and AI coding agents fix issues. The plugin automates workflows that resolve issues in minutes without disrupting the developer experience, empowering them to write secure code effortlessly.

"Despite the advances we see daily, application security teams are still struggling to adopt AI in a way that helps them improve productivity," said Chris Steffen, vice president of Research at Enterprise Management Associates.
"They need greater visibility and context into AI-generated code and solutions to help them uncover security risks sooner and faster. Endor Labs is ahead of the game with AI innovations built specifically for application security engineers using its wealth of data and knowledge," he added.