SnapLogic announced today two new capabilities for its Agentic Integration Platform: AI Gateway, a centralized layer for authentication, authorization, and traffic throttling across AI agent interactions, and Trusted Agent Identity, a system that propagates individual user identity through every layer of an agent’s execution chain. The capabilities were announced via GlobeNewswire on April 16, with Yahoo Finance syndicating the announcement.

“Enterprises don’t have a shortage of AI models or agents. They have a shortage of execution,” said Jeremiah Stone, CTO of SnapLogic, in the announcement. “The real challenge is operationalizing AI as digital labor inside business processes. With this expansion of our platform, we’re enabling organizations to turn AI into real work.”

What the Two Capabilities Do

AI Gateway provides centralized authentication, authorization, and traffic throttling across all AI agent interactions within an enterprise. It includes a dedicated MCP observability dashboard that monitors how agents interact with enterprise systems in real time, according to SnapLogic’s announcement. The dashboard is purpose-built for agent traffic rather than relying on general-purpose tracing tools.

Trusted Agent Identity solves a specific security problem: when an AI agent takes an action on behalf of a user, it should operate with that user’s identity and permissions rather than a shared service account. Using token propagation, the end user’s identity flows through every layer, from the agent to the integration layer to the backend enterprise system. Every agent action is auditable back to the individual who initiated it.

The combination addresses a gap cited by Gartner research, referenced in SnapLogic’s announcement: nearly 50% of generative AI projects were abandoned after proof of concept due to poor data quality, inadequate risk controls, escalating costs, or unclear business value.

The Broader Platform

Beyond governance, SnapLogic also expanded its platform’s AI connectivity and orchestration layers. The OpenAPI Function Generator converts any API specification into agent-callable capabilities without manual code, and native bi-directional MCP support bridges more than 1,000 prebuilt connectors (spanning ERP, CRM, databases, and SaaS systems) to the growing MCP ecosystem.

AgentCreator, SnapLogic’s visual agent builder, lets teams build and deploy custom AI agents with visibility into every reasoning step, tool call, and result at design time. Workflows can coordinate across multiple agents and enterprise systems simultaneously.

SnapLogic’s enterprise customers include AstraZeneca, Adobe, Verizon, and Sony, giving these capabilities an immediate deployment footprint in regulated and Fortune 500 environments. The platform provides capability parity across OpenAI, Azure OpenAI, Google Gemini, and Amazon Bedrock, spanning eight capability dimensions for a consistent experience regardless of model provider.

The Agent Identity Pattern

Trusted Agent Identity connects to a broader pattern emerging across the agent infrastructure market this week. OpenAI joined the FIDO Alliance to help develop authentication standards for autonomous agents. Cisco is reportedly acquiring Astrix Security for $250-350M to address non-human identity. KnowBe4 launched Agent Risk Manager for enterprise agent governance. SnapLogic’s contribution is the per-user identity propagation approach: rather than giving agents their own credentials, the agent inherits the specific permissions of the human who triggered it. The audit trail stays clean because it never detaches from a real person’s authorization chain.

For enterprise teams stuck between “the demo works” and “we can put this in production,” the execution gap that Stone described is the specific problem these tools target.