Claude Code Security: Why the Real Risk Lies Beyond Code
Many cybersecurity professionals have been following Anthropic's announcement about the release of Claude Code Security on Friday. This created the beginning of a panic on the cybersecurity stock market. It also raised a lot of questions from domain experts, investors and security enthusiasts. Anthropic's announcement Anthropic introduces Claude Code Security: a tool that scans full codebases for security vulnerabilities, and can propose fixes directly in developer workflows. The tool leverages the latest foundational model's reasoning capabilities to provide a new experience. In a world where code will be generated only by AI, this can sound very much like code security is dead. Our vision 18 months ago, SAST, SCA, and IaC security were areas where we had real traction and could see ourselves expanding. But as AI tooling started reshaping how code gets written, we made a tough call. We decided to stop these initiatives and go all-in on what we believed would matter most: Protecting enterprises against leaked secrets and mismanaged NHIs . We envisioned a future where identity is crucial for the AI era security, with secrets enabling AIs to access data and take actions . After pioneering in secrets detection for years we witnessed how amplified the problem became as LLM emerged: more API keys for AI services, more code generated, often less secure, more agents requiring sophisticated access to a myriad of tools. All in all, this resulted in more secrets exposed. Yet the problem of overseeing and managing these secrets in a secure way remains unsolved. The paradigm shifted from human hardcoding secrets in their code, to AIs having wide access levels on several systems with humans, coders and non-coders, prompting them and creating new vulnerabilities. 18 months later, let me describe where we stand. What isn't changing Best in class secrets detection GitGuardian is the leader in secrets detection . We are the only solution able to scan large volume of data at scale (5