Claude’s Enterprise Expansion Accelerates Across the Channel

Anthropic Claude Enterprise Adoption Expands in Channel

Anthropic’s Claude momentum grows as access returns, partner investments expand, and vendors add AI security controls for enterprises.

Written By
Jordan Smith
Jordan Smith
Jul 7, 2026
4 minute read
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Frontier AI models have been key drivers for the AI revolution, and Anthropic has been making significant moves to boost its channel presence and give the company an enterprise boost.

Export restrictions on Anthropic AI lifted

To start July, more Claude news hit, with the U.S. Department of Commerce lifting export restrictions on Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models.

This ruling allows Anthropic to restore global access to Fable 5 via the Claude platform, Claude AI, and Claude Code.

Anthropic previously disabled access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 in mid-June to comply with an export control directive issued by the U.S. government, citing “national security authorities.”

As part of the directive, Anthropic was told to suspend all access “by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees.”

Access to Mythos 5 was also restored for some U.S. organizations after government approval was granted on June 26.

Anthropic will also work with the federal government on expanding access to Mythos 5 for more domestic and international partners through its Glasswing program, a cybersecurity initiative providing selected organizations with access to advanced AI models for defensive security testing.

Project Glasswing brings Dell Technologies and others together to address security concerns

Anthropic will also work with the federal government to expand access to Mythos 5 for more domestic and international partners through its Glasswing program, a cybersecurity initiative that provides selected organizations with access to advanced AI models for defensive security testing.

Among the participants in Anthropic’s Project Glasswing program is Dell Technologies.

As part of Project Glasswing, Dell will be utilizing Claude Mythos Preview to proactively find and fix vulnerabilities in its products. This is meant to help boost secure product development and vulnerability response practices that help customers stay resilient. 

According to Dell’s Chief Security Officer, John Scimone: “We are committed to responsibly using Mythos Preview and other advanced AI capabilities as we continue our mission to build the world’s most secure and resilient technology. Our goal is to find and remediate vulnerabilities at speed and disclose available fixes so customers can protect their environments before threats materialize.”

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Security vendors target Claude enterprise adoption

The proliferation of Claude across enterprises has set off a domino effect in the security sector.

Radware adds compliance reporting and agentic AI security

Radware, a leader in AI and application security and delivery solutions for multi-cloud environments, has recently enhanced its Agentic AI Protection solution to help organizations govern and secure AI agents across enterprise environments.

It adds compliance reporting for supporting alignment with leading global AI standards, enhanced visibility into agent ecosystems, and protection for developer-hosted AI agents, such as Claude.

“Organizations are deploying AI agents across increasingly complex environments, creating new requirements for visibility, governance, and security,” said David Aviv, chief technology officer (CTO) at Radware. “These enhancements help organizations better understand agent behavior, support their compliance efforts, and help extend protection to AI agents operating across both SaaS and local developer-hosted environments.”

Radware Agentic AI Protection combines visibility, governance, compliance reporting, and real-time behavioral protection in a unified solution to help organizations securely adopt and scale AI agents across the enterprise.

Exabean introduces AI visibility and risk reduction capabilities

Meanwhile, Exabeam, a provider of Behavior Intelligence for the agentic enterprise, announced new capabilities of its own.

These new capabilities will help security teams detect, investigate, and reduce risk from AI agents, autonomous workflows, and human-to-agent activity across modern enterprise environments.

The expanded capabilities will extend Exabeam’s visibility across Claude and other platforms, including ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Copilot, and GitHub Copilot. The expansion will help security teams identify and understand the AI being used and adopted, as well as monitor usage patterns across authorized services.

“Organizations are rapidly moving from AI experimentation to autonomous AI agents operating across the enterprise,” said Pete Harteveld, CEO of Exabeam. “Security teams need visibility not only into human activity, but into how agents behave, interact, and make decisions. Exabeam is helping customers secure this new reality by bringing together AI visibility, behavioral analytics, and threat detection across human users, AI agents, and the systems they interact with.”

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Linx Security integrates with Claude Compliance

Linx Security, an AI-native identity security and governance platform, is implementing a new integration with Claude Compliance API, powered by Anthropic.

As a result of this integration, Claude will be integrated into the Linx platform as a fully governed application, providing enterprise security and IT teams with visibility and control over Claude access.

“Claude has become a critical enterprise application almost overnight, but without the identity governance controls that organizations apply to everything else in their stack,” said Israel Duanis, CEO and Co-Founder at Linx. “You can see who has access to Salesforce. You can see who holds admin keys in your cloud infrastructure. You should be able to see the same for Claude. This integration makes that possible, and it does it the right way: not as a standalone tool, but as part of the same identity fabric our customers already use to govern every identity in their environment.”

Launching of the Claude Partner Network

Not long ago, Anthropic launched the Claude Partner Network – committing $100 million to the venture that seeks to help consulting firms and integrators deploy Claude AI in enterprise environments.

The million-dollar investment will go toward training programs, certifications, technical support, and joint sales efforts.

Early partners for the program include organizations such as Accenture, Deloitte, PwC, KPMG, Slalom, Tribe AI, and Turing.

Claude is just one of many frontier AI models becoming more relevant in the channel space; it’s also introduced new opportunities – both positive and negative. Channel enterprises can improve their security posture, but these models also introduce new threats, which organizations like Radware, Exabeam, and Linx are in a position to address.

Jordan Smith

Jordan Smith is an enterprise technology and cybersecurity journalist with nearly a decade of experience covering B2B IT, federal technology, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, cloud computing, and emerging digital trends. His reporting helps business and technology leaders understand how new technologies, security challenges, and infrastructure decisions affect modern organizations. Jordan has reported on enterprise and public-sector technology for TechnologyAdvice, HCLTech, MeriTalk, and Channel Insider. His background spans cybersecurity, cloud infrastructure, AI adoption, digital transformation, and federal IT initiatives, giving him a broad perspective on the tools, policies, and innovations shaping today’s technology landscape. Before joining TechnologyAdvice, Jordan served as a Senior Technology Reporter at MeriTalk, where he covered the federal IT space, and later worked as a US Regional Reporter and Copy Editor/Writer for HCLTech. His experience across reporting, copyediting, podcasting, and event moderation allows him to translate complex technical topics into clear, timely, and useful insights for business audiences. Jordan holds a Master of Arts in Journalism from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and a Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice and Psychology from Edgewood University. Through his work, he helps readers stay informed about cybersecurity developments, enterprise technology trends, and the business impact of emerging IT solutions.

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