About

Agents should move fast, and still answer to someone.

Clawvisor exists because the two things teams want from AI agents pull against each other: give them enough access to be useful, but not enough to be dangerous. We think you shouldn't have to choose.

Why we built it

The fastest way to make an agent useful is to hand it credentials and get out of the way. The fastest way to get hurt is the same thing. Every team running agents in production eventually hits this wall: blanket "skip permissions" to stay productive, or drown reviewers in prompts until they rubber-stamp.

Clawvisor is the gateway that resolves that tension. By making the unit of trust the task, not a standing credential and not an individual tool call, agents keep their speed while every request runs through verification, scoping, and logging first. You get the record and the controls; your agents barely notice we're there.

What we believe

Approve the task, not the tools

A task is a purpose plus the tools it needs. Approve it once and containment, logging, cost, and credentials all follow from that single decision. It's the abstraction the whole product is built on.

Defense in depth, by design

Containment, credential isolation, policy gating, and full logging each shrink what can go wrong, and stack into a posture where a single mistake never becomes an incident. Every layer earns its place.

Proof over promises

We say exactly what Clawvisor does and let you verify it: open code you can read, scoped credentials agents never see, a complete record of every call. Claims you can check beat badges you take on faith.

Open at the core

The gateway is open source. You can read it, audit it, and run it yourself. Security infrastructure you can't inspect is just a different black box.

Who's behind it

Clawvisor is built by a small team of thoughtful security and user-experience product builders, people who care as much about how a control feels as whether it holds.

Eric Levine

Founder

Eric Levine

A second-time founder, Eric previously built Berbix, the identity-verification company acquired by Socure in 2023. Before Berbix, he led the engineering trust and safety team at Airbnb. He started Clawvisor so AI agents can finally deliver on their promise to transform how we work, by making them trustworthy enough to do the job correctly.

Want the long version?

The fastest way to understand Clawvisor is to put it in front of an agent and watch a task get scoped.