Photo Credit: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Google Cloud and Palo Alto Networks have agreed to a multi-year partnership worth nearly $10 billion, with Palo Alto committing to run its AI-powered security platforms on Google Cloud infrastructure. The deal allows Google Cloud as the primary provider for Palo Alto’s AI and cybersecurity workloads, including its new Prisma AIRS platform designed to secure enterprise AI agents. 

This agreement arrives during a rise of cybersecurity consolidation in the AI era, especially following Palo Alto’s recent $25 billion acquisition of CyberArk and Google’s approval-pending $32 billion purchase of Wiz.

The Google Cloud and Palo Alto Networks’ partnership expands on a collaboration that began in 2024 when there was an integration of Palo Alto’s Prisma Cloud with Google Cloud services. Now, Palo Alto plans to migrate significant internal operations and customer-facing tools to Google Cloud, leveraging Vertex AI and Gemini models to enhance threat detection. 

Over the next several years at which the partnership will span, Google’s commitment will approach $10 billion in spending on compute, storage, and AI services.

Palo Alto, the cybersecurity leader behind products like Cortex XDR, will prioritize Google Cloud for scaling its Agentic AI defenses, which are autonomous systems that monitor and respond to threats in real time. Prisma AIRS will also mirror this function as it embeds security directly into AI runtimes to catch issues like prompt injection or data exfiltration by threat actors. 

Why enterprises need the integration of AI and Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity demands have increased with the rise of AI agents in business operations, otherwise known as Enterprise AI. These upgraded software handle tasks from code generation to database queries, however, they also introduce blind spots for traditional tools. For example, firewalls might approve an agent’s traffic as legitimate, even if it’s been compromised. 

Palo Alto’s integration with Google Cloud will address this by combining massive AI compute with runtime monitoring.

While the partnership sets a precedent of cloud providers fueling security leaders to tackle AI risks head-on, challenges still remain. Integrating CyberArk’s identity tools with Prisma AIRS demands seamless engineering. Enterprises must also adapt to vendor lock-in, weighing the convenience of all-in-one platforms against flexibility.

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I’m Precious Amusat, Phronews’ Content Writer. I conduct in-depth research and write on the latest developments in the tech industry, including trends in big tech, startups, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and their global impacts. When I’m off the clock, you’ll find me cheering on women’s footy, curled up with a romance novel, or binge-watching crime thrillers.

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