By Jaspreet Singh
Dec 2 (Reuters) – Cybersecurity company Okta forecast fourth-quarter revenue above Wall Street estimates on Tuesday, betting on growing demand for its identity and access management solutions.
Clients turn to companies such as Okta to safeguard identities of both humans and a growing number of artificial intelligence-powered systems, as hackers frequently target these identities as entry points to steal sensitive business data.
“The opportunity to be the access and identity layer for the AI agents and enterprises is probably bigger than the customer and workforce identity businesses,” Okta CEO Todd McKinnon told Reuters in an interview.
Okta’s platform automates user access to applications and resources through products such as single sign-on (SSO) and uses AI to moni

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