Varonis adds Claude Compliance API to Atlas governance

Varonis says its Atlas AI Security Platform now integrates the Claude Compliance API, bringing Claude Enterprise and Claude Platform activity under one governance and monitoring view—so security teams can track usage, investigate full sessions, and assess AI r
Varonis is bringing another layer of governance into its AI security platform, tying its Atlas AI Security Platform directly to Claude activity via the Claude Compliance API.
The company says the integration brings Claude Enterprise and Claude Platform activity into Atlas, aiming to give security and governance teams the visibility they need when organizations rely on Claude for everyday work and for building AI-powered tools.
Varonis frames the move around a familiar problem: AI use keeps happening across departments. systems. and sessions—even when formal controls are still catching up. With the new integration. Atlas is designed to monitor Claude usage. investigate misuse across full sessions. and assess AI-related risk with data context.
The pitch is built for teams who need more than a single event log. Atlas is positioned to monitor conversation content continuously, including chats, uploaded files, and projects, so investigations can be centralized. Instead of treating risky behavior as isolated incidents. Varonis says Atlas detects sensitive data exposure. jailbreak attempts. and suspicious prompt patterns as they occur across a session.
That session-level approach shows up again in the way Atlas lets teams review activity. Varonis says users can view complete Claude chat sessions in chronological order to understand activity, intent, and misuse in full context.
The integration also expands Atlas’ coverage beyond chat. Claude Platform, which Varonis describes as embedding Claude into custom applications, products, and AI agents, is also included. In that setup, Atlas is said to provide visibility into admin, configuration, and resource activity.
Varonis highlights three parts of that Claude Platform monitoring: AI observability through audit and admin events stored for investigation. real-time alerts tied to policy violations and session activity. and proactive AI pen testing. The company specifically calls out stress-testing assistants and agents for vulnerabilities such as prompt injection and jailbreaks.
All of this is tied, in Varonis’ telling, to the data underneath the AI tools. Atlas, the company says, connects AI activity to underlying data including permissions, sensitivity, classification, and access. The goal is for security teams to understand not just what AI systems exist. but what data those systems can reach—and whether that access is safe.
Varonis also ties Atlas’ approach to its foundation in the Varonis Data Security Platform. It describes Atlas as combining AI security with deep data context—sensitivity. permissions. and access activity—so organizations can discover AI risk. remediate exposures proactively. enforce guardrails. and manage governance at scale.
In its broader product claims. Varonis says Atlas is designed to cover any AI system organizations build or run. including hosted AI platforms. custom LLMs. chatbots. MCP. and every major agentic framework. It also says Atlas secures AI across the entire lifecycle. from posture management and security testing to runtime protection and governance.
Varonis says Atlas is available today. The company is also offering a free trial with full access to Atlas’ AI inventory. posture management. security testing. runtime guardrails. and compliance reporting functionality. The content also notes that the announcement is sponsored and written by Varonis. and includes a prompt to request a free trial with full access to Atlas.
Varonis Atlas Claude Compliance API Claude Enterprise Claude Platform AI governance AI security jailbreak detection prompt injection session investigation compliance reporting runtime guardrails
So they can read all your Claude chats now? That sounds… not great.
I don’t even get why this needs “compliance.” If your company is using Claude, they already have logs, right? Sounds like more dashboard stuff to justify budgets.
It says they’re monitoring sessions and uploaded files but like… is it only for security teams or can regular admins see the content too? Also “jailbreak attempts” lol so they’re basically flagging when someone tries to get around AI rules. I guess that’s good? but also creepy.
Governance view, investigation view, full sessions in chronological order… that’s literally surveillance but they’re calling it governance. Next they’ll say it helps “assess AI r Varonis” which isn’t even a full sentence in the article. Half the time these integrations just end up breaking privacy anyway, watch.