Cloudflare (NET) shares edged higher in recent trading as investors reacted positively to a new partnership with Wiz, a Google Cloud–backed cybersecurity firm. The collaboration signals a deeper push into AI-native security infrastructure at a time when enterprises are rapidly deploying large language models across cloud environments.
The stock’s modest gain reflects growing market confidence that Cloudflare is positioning itself as a core security layer for the emerging “AI-first” internet. While broader tech markets remain volatile, the deal adds a fresh narrative catalyst for NET: expanding dominance in cloud and application security, especially for AI workloads.
Cloudflare announced that it has partnered with Wiz to integrate its AI Security for Apps with Wiz’s Security Graph. The combined system is designed to give security teams a unified view of AI applications, infrastructure, and associated risks across cloud environments.
The integration allows organizations to detect large language model endpoints embedded within web applications, monitor traffic for prompt injection attacks, and identify potential personal data leaks. It also maps how data flows between AI models, applications, and storage systems, highlighting weak points where protection is missing.
Importantly, Cloudflare emphasized that the system does not require additional agents or complex custom workflows. This plug-and-play approach is increasingly important for enterprises struggling to secure rapidly deployed AI tools.
The partnership is largely a response to the growing issue of “shadow AI,” where developers deploy AI features such as chatbots and copilots faster than enterprise security teams can evaluate them.
This rapid adoption has created blind spots in corporate infrastructure. Every new AI endpoint can introduce vulnerabilities, including prompt injection attacks or unintended exposure of sensitive data. Traditional cybersecurity tools often fail to fully detect or mitigate these AI-specific risks.
Cloudflare and Wiz aim to close that gap by building a security layer that works across multiple models and cloud providers, rather than being limited to a single ecosystem.
The collaboration also gains strategic importance following Google’s US$32 billion acquisition of Wiz, one of the largest cybersecurity deals in the company’s history. The acquisition strengthens Google Cloud’s security ambitions while reinforcing Wiz’s role as a multi-cloud security provider supporting platforms like Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure.
This multi-cloud flexibility is particularly important for Cloudflare, which operates across diverse enterprise environments. It ensures that the integration between Wiz and Cloudflare can scale beyond a single ecosystem, positioning both companies as infrastructure-level security providers in the AI era.
Cloudflare shares saw a slight upward move following the announcement, reflecting cautious optimism rather than a sharp rally. Investors appear to view the partnership as strategically significant but still early in its monetization cycle.
Market sentiment has increasingly favored companies that can address AI security risks at scale. As enterprises continue integrating generative AI into production systems, demand for unified monitoring and threat detection tools is expected to rise.
The broader tech sector has recently been mixed, with investors selectively rewarding firms tied to AI infrastructure while penalizing those lacking clear revenue acceleration. Cloudflare’s continued expansion into AI security helps reinforce its positioning as more than just a content delivery network, but a broader application security platform.
The post Cloudflare (NET) Stock; Gains Slightly as Wiz AI Security Deal Boosts Cloud Defense Outlook appeared first on CoinCentral.