SentinelOne Unveils Wayfinder Frontier AI ServicesSentinelOne Unveils Wayfinder Frontier AI Services to Proactively Expose, Prioritize, and Break Real-World Exploitation ChainsNew offering from SentinelOne combines frontier AI models with elite human experts to uncover threats that actually matter and the mitigations that stop real-world attacksSentinelOne announced Wayfinder Frontier AI Services, a new offering built for the defining cybersecurity question of the frontier AI era: not what new vulnerabilities exist in theory, but what an adversary can actually exploit today. The service initially pairs with Anthropic’s Claude Security, powered by Claude Opus 4.7 with SentinelOne's most seasoned offensive and defensive experts to deliver continuous, intelligence-led discovery, prioritization, and guide remediations across the customer's full attack surface. Wayfinder Frontier AI Service extends SentinelOne's Wayfinder portfolio — which already includes Wayfinder Threat Hunting, Wayfinder MDR Essentials, Wayfinder MDR Elite, and Wayfinder Incident Readiness & Response — into a new domain: proactive, AI-accelerated exposure management that does not stop at discovery. Why This, Why Now Frontier AI is changing the economics of vulnerability discovery for both sides. Adversaries now use advanced models to find and weaponize weaknesses faster than most security teams can triage them. But as SentinelOne recently detailed in Frontier AI Reinforces the Future of Modern Cyber Defense, raw vulnerability counts rarely map cleanly to real-world risk. Many vulnerabilities are not meaningfully exploitable in live environments. Many are already reduced by architectural layers, controls, and runtime protections. What matters is the ability to understand real conditions, prioritize what is actually exploitable in a given environment, and apply mitigations that break the chain before an attacker can complete it. "The industry doesn't need a scanner-on-steroids that just prints longer lists," said Steve Stone, Chief Customer Officer, SentinelOne. "Customers need to know which of their exposures adversaries are actually chaining together today, in their environment, and what to do about it now. Wayfinder Frontier AI Service is built for that question. We're putting frontier-grade AI and our most seasoned offensive and defensive experts into the same loop, directly on top of the telemetry and controls customers already trust, and returning decisions — not noise." What the Service Delivers Wayfinder Frontier AI Service gives customers a continuous human-and-AI partnership across the full exposure lifecycle:
Built on a Multi-Model Foundation Wayfinder Frontier AI Services leverages the Singularity™ Platform and inherits the foundational Wayfinder model: the fusion of agentic AI, curated intelligence, and elite human expertise, delivered as a partnership rather than a one-way output. It draws on SentinelOne's proprietary telemetry from tens of millions of endpoints and cloud workloads, threat intelligence from SentinelLABS and Google Threat Intelligence, and a deliberately inclusive multi-model approach that incorporates frontier models — including Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.7 and access to advanced research models used in applied security work. This multi-model foundation reflects SentinelOne's view that no single model will ever be the answer — the advantage belongs to defenders who orchestrate the right intelligence for each task and validate every output with human judgment. The launch follows SentinelOne's deepened collaboration with Anthropic, announced separately today, which formalizes joint research that feeds directly into Wayfinder service delivery. Proven at Machine Speed The case for proactive, AI-driven defense is not theoretical. Over the past quarter alone, the Singularity™ Platform autonomously blocked zero-day and supply-chain attacks against widely used components, including LiteLLM, Axios, and CPU-Z — novel threats leveraging previously unknown vulnerabilities, stopped at machine speed. Wayfinder Frontier AI Services extends that same operating model further left in the lifecycle, finding issues that the next class of attacker tooling will hunt for, before that tooling arrives to stop attacks before they happen. Source: SentinelOne media announcement | |