VOOZH about

URL: https://thenewstack.io/galileo-agent-control-open-source/

⇱ Galileo releases Agent Control, a centralized guardrails platform for enterprise AI agents - The New Stack


TNS
SUBSCRIBE
Join our community of software engineering leaders and aspirational developers. Always stay in-the-know by getting the most important news and exclusive content delivered fresh to your inbox to learn more about at-scale software development.
REQUIRED
It seems that you've previously unsubscribed from our newsletter in the past. Click the button below to open the re-subscribe form in a new tab. When you're done, simply close that tab and continue with this form to complete your subscription.
The New Stack does not sell your information or share it with unaffiliated third parties. By continuing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Welcome and thank you for joining The New Stack community!
Please answer a few simple questions to help us deliver the news and resources you are interested in.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Great to meet you!
Tell us a bit about your job so we can cover the topics you find most relevant.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Welcome!

We’re so glad you’re here. You can expect all the best TNS content to arrive Monday through Friday to keep you on top of the news and at the top of your game.

What’s next?

Check your inbox for a confirmation email where you can adjust your preferences and even join additional groups.

Follow TNS on your favorite social media networks.

Become a TNS follower on LinkedIn.

Check out the latest featured and trending stories while you wait for your first TNS newsletter.

PREV
1 of 2
NEXT
VOXPOP
As a JavaScript developer, what non-React tools do you use most often?
Angular
0%
Astro
0%
Svelte
0%
Vue.js
0%
Other
0%
I only use React
0%
I don't use JavaScript
0%
Thanks for your opinion! Subscribe below to get the final results, published exclusively in our TNS Update newsletter:
NEW! Try Stackie AI
From clobbered drafts to real-time sync
Apr 14th 2026 10:00am, by David Moore
TypeScript 6.0 RC arrives as a bridge to a faster future
Mar 14th 2026 9:00am, by Darryl K. Taft
Mastra empowers web devs to build AI agents in TypeScript
Jan 28th 2026 11:00am, by Loraine Lawson
2026-03-11 12:48:43
Galileo releases Agent Control, a centralized guardrails platform for enterprise AI agents
500,
AI Agents / AI Operations / Open Source

Galileo releases Agent Control, a centralized guardrails platform for enterprise AI agents

Galileo releases Agent Control, an open source control plane for governing AI agents at scale. AWS, CrewAI, and Glean are among the first partners.
Mar 11th, 2026 12:48pm by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
👁 Featued image for: Galileo releases Agent Control, a centralized guardrails platform for enterprise AI agents
Prakasit Khuansuwan for Unsplash+

Galileo, a company known for its AI observability and guardrails technology, on Wednesday released Agent Control, an open source control plane designed to help enterprises govern AI agents at scale.

The platform allows organizations to write behavioral policies once and enforce them across all agent deployments.

AWS, CrewAI, and Glean will be among the first partners to offer Agent Control. This will give their customers access to centralized governance frameworks for managing agent behavior in production.

There’s certainly a growing market for this technology. According to IDC, use of AI agents among Global 2000 organizations is expected to increase tenfold by 2027. This, in turn, means token and API call volumes will spike by a factor of 1,000.

Tim Law, IDC’s Research Director for AI and Automation, says in a press release about the news, “Centralized management of policies can help organizations manage AI agent behaviors. A unified control plane and centralized governance can help deploy AI agents at scale while ensuring continual improvement through evaluation and lifecycle management.”

What Agent Control brings to the table is a standardized way for companies to apply guardrails across agents, enabling:

  • A centralized policy layer for enforcing governance and blocking unsafe behaviors at runtime.
  • Real-time updates to agent policies without requiring downtime or code modifications.

Vikram Chatterji, Galileo’s co-founder and CEO, tells The New Stack that in practice, this means instead of using hard-coded, brittle safety rules, “Agent Control lets developers define guardrails once and apply them everywhere. By open-sourcing this under Apache 2.0, we’re ensuring every enterprise and developer community can use it without vendor lock-in.”

“Agent Control lets developers define guardrails once and apply them everywhere. By open-sourcing this under Apache 2.0, we’re ensuring every enterprise and developer community can use it without vendor lock-in.”
— Vikram Chatterji, co-founder and CEO, Galileo

As the name suggests, the company claims that Agent Control will connect easily to any agent and supports guardrail evaluators from any vendor or custom in-house tools. Policies remain portable across environments, giving teams flexibility as they evolve their agent ecosystems.
Galileo anticipates that common use cases include preventing LLM hallucinations, enforcing data privacy rules, steering model selection to control token costs, and ensuring tone consistency in customer-facing AI agents.

Of course, Agent Control isn’t the only such product in the market. Others include Humanlayer Agent Control Plane, an open source, Kubernetes‑native orchestrator for AI agents; GitHub Enterprise AI Controls, GitHub’s governance layer for AI agents; and Microsoft Agent 365, Microsoft 365’s control plane for AI agents in Azure.

Despite this strong competition, hundreds of AI teams, including Fortune 50 enterprises, use Galileo’s existing platform to test, monitor, and secure AI applications that handle high volumes of traffic and data. It appears the company has the technical and business chops needed to be a player in the agent control space.

“The number one blocker for enterprise agents is no longer the models. Those are getting better every day. To graduate agents to production, the industry needs transparent, community-driven guardrails.”
— Dev Rishi, GM of AI, Rubrik

As Dev Rishi, GM of AI at Rubrik, a security cloud company, tells The New Stack, “The number one blocker for enterprise agents is no longer the models. Those are getting better every day. To graduate agents to production, the industry needs transparent, community-driven guardrails. Open source projects like Agent Control are exactly the kind of open standards the industry needs to make autonomous agents safe for the enterprise.”

Agent Control is now available under the Apache-2.0 license, with source code, SDK, and documentation available on GitHub.

TRENDING STORIES
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, aka sjvn, has been writing about technology and the business of technology since CP/M-80 was the cutting-edge PC operating system, 300bps was a fast internet connection, WordStar was the state-of-the-art word processor, and we liked it.
Read more from Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
SHARE THIS STORY
TRENDING STORIES
TNS owner Insight Partners is an investor in: Real, CrewAI.
SHARE THIS STORY
TRENDING STORIES
TNS DAILY NEWSLETTER Receive a free roundup of the most recent TNS articles in your inbox each day.
The New Stack does not sell your information or share it with unaffiliated third parties. By continuing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.