Small businesses are increasingly becoming prime targets for cybercriminals, with nearly half of them experiencing attacks that can lead to severe financial consequences or even closure. While employees spend over 85% of their workday in web browsers, standard browsers and legacy antivirus tools often fail to detect modern threats because they cannot see what happens inside web sessions. Consequently, sophisticated evasion techniques—such as malware chunking, HTML smuggling, and deceptive "browser-in-the-browser" attacks—bypass traditional defenses to steal credentials and data.
Prisma Browser for Business addresses this security blind spot by delivering enterprise-grade protection powered by Precision AI, specifically scaled for small and medium businesses. It embeds directly into the familiar browsing experience to automatically analyze billions of events and block risky websites, phishing scams, and ransomware downloads before they can damage the business. This proactive approach ensures that advanced threats are stopped inline, even if they attempt to hide from standard security scans.
Beyond protecting against external attacks, the browser also serves as a critical guardrail against accidental data leaks that could compromise client trust. It prevents employees from unknowingly sharing sensitive information—such as customer lists, financial records, or proprietary code—with public Generative AI tools, personal email accounts, or unauthorized cloud storage. This capability is essential for maintaining confidentiality in sensitive industries like healthcare, law, and finance.
Designed for zero-effort adoption, Prisma Browser for Business eliminates the need for complex IT management or specialized security expertise. Owners can onboard their entire team via email and rely on pre-configured security policies that provide immediate protection. This allows small business leaders to focus on scaling their operations and managing priorities, confident that their digital workspace is secure against both malicious actors and accidental errors.