Enterprise AI Wherever Work Happens
June marked a major step forward for Cortex and the broader Pervaziv AI platform. After a strong May focused on performance, security review, threat modeling, governance, and dependable agentic engineering, June moved the story into a new phase: Enterprise AI Mobility.
The theme was clear. Enterprise AI cannot stay locked inside one browser, one IDE, one device, or one workflow. Modern engineering and security work happens across desktops, browsers, phones, cloud consoles, collaboration tools, repositories, dashboards, and customer conversations. Teams need AI that follows the work instead of forcing the work to follow the AI.
That is the direction Cortex advanced throughout June.
The month began by consolidating the gains from May, then moved into a more connected AI security workspace, expanded secure agentic engineering to Android, advanced trusted validation and remediation workflows, brought Cortex to iPhone, connected the mobility story through short-form videos, and closed with Safari support across every major browser.
Together, these updates show a bigger platform direction. Cortex is becoming an Enterprise AI Control Layer available across IDEs, browsers, Android, iPhone, cloud-connected workflows, enterprise systems, and security operations. The focus is no longer simply asking AI a question. The focus is secure, connected, validated, mobile, and governed AI assistance wherever enterprise work happens.
From Operational AI to Mobile Enterprise AI
June built directly on the foundation established in May.
May was about making Cortex more dependable for enterprise use. Cortex 3.8 streamlined the AI workspace. Cortex 4.0 strengthened the Enterprise AI Control Layer with better performance and a redesigned experience. Cortex 4.1 improved real-time interaction, streaming, retry, cancellation, and reliability. Cortex 4.2 introduced AI Threat Modeling and AI Security Review. Cortex 4.3 focused on session continuity, secure authentication, workflow persistence, controlled AI-assisted changes, and dependable agentic engineering.
That foundation made the June expansion possible.
A mobile AI experience is not valuable if it loses context, breaks authentication, forgets prior work, or treats every device as a disconnected surface. Cortex had already become more responsive, more secure, more context-aware, and more aligned with enterprise workflows. June extended that foundation outward.
The result was a shift from operational AI to mobile operational AI.
The question became: how do we make the same secure, governed, enterprise-aware AI experience available across the full workday, not only when a developer is sitting in front of an IDE?
Cortex 4.4: A More Connected AI Security Workspace
The first major June product story was Cortex 4.4, which strengthened Cortex as a more connected AI security workspace.
Cortex 4.4 improved coordination across the console, VS Code, and browser extension. That matters because security work rarely happens in one place. Developers may begin in the IDE, security teams may review reports in the console, leaders may need summarized risk, and browser workflows may support investigation, documentation, cloud review, and collaboration.
Inside VS Code, Cortex became more developer-native. Users could move beyond isolated file checks and begin repository-level security review directly from the IDE. Workflows became clearer by separating AI-assisted review, file-level checks, and repository-level checks.
The release also improved AI summaries for security decisions. Raw reports can be valuable but hard to consume quickly. Cortex 4.4 helped users summarize repository-level findings, identify priorities, and understand next steps.
This is a key part of the Enterprise AI Control Layer vision. Finding issues is only one piece of the value. Helping teams understand what matters, communicate it clearly, and act faster is where AI becomes a decision layer.
Cortex 4.4 also improved usage controls, subscription-aware behavior, browser reliability, authentication flows, reporting, export behavior, and user-facing polish. These operational details matter because enterprises need consistent sessions, predictable usage, clean reporting, and professional product surfaces.
By strengthening the workspace across IDE, browser, and console, Cortex 4.4 prepared the platform for the mobility expansion that followed.
Cortex 4.5: Secure Agentic Engineering on Android
Cortex 4.5 brought the Enterprise AI Control Layer to Android.
This was one of the defining releases of June because it moved Cortex beyond desktop-first workflows and into the mobile edge of enterprise work. Developers, architects, security leaders, and business stakeholders often need to review ideas, respond to operational questions, evaluate risk, or continue conversations away from the workstation.
The Android application delivered a full Cortex chat experience through a mobile-first interface. Users could start new conversations, continue existing work, restore previous sessions, manage threads, and access AI assistance from a phone. The goal was not a disconnected mobile chatbot. The goal was to extend the same enterprise AI workspace across devices.
Privacy before send remained central. Mobile users often paste snippets, attach screenshots, forward documents, or interact with AI while multitasking. Cortex 4.5 added privacy scanning for messages and attachments before content is submitted to AI services, helping identify credentials, personal information, tokens, keys, and other sensitive data.
Cortex 4.5 also extended connected enterprise context to Android. With the right account and configuration, the mobile app could work with enterprise integrations and security workflows rather than operating as a standalone chat surface.
AI Threat Modeling and AI Security Review also became more accessible on the go. Users could reason through design risks, attack paths, security concerns, and controls from a mobile device.
The release also strengthened continuity across devices through saved conversations, restored sessions, synchronized chat history, thread management, mobile-ready attachments, voice input, export capabilities, dark mode, theme customization, authentication improvements, and marketplace readiness.
With Android support, Cortex moved closer to the core June message: enterprise AI wherever work happens.
Cortex 4.7: From AI-Assisted Coding to Trusted Agentic Engineering
Cortex 4.7 shifted the June story from mobility to trust.
As coding agents become more capable, the enterprise question is no longer only whether AI can generate code, suggest fixes, or summarize findings. The bigger question is whether those actions can be validated, governed, traced, and trusted inside real software delivery environments.
Cortex 4.7 advanced that direction with safer validation, smarter remediation, and enterprise-ready security workflows.
The release strengthened post-change validation, repository-aware agent guidance, structured fix verification, security remediation workflows, and dependency and infrastructure risk review. Together, these improvements moved Cortex closer to a verify-first model for AI-assisted development.
In enterprise software delivery, “done” cannot simply mean AI produced code. Done means the change was checked, failures were surfaced, residual risk was understood, affected files were known, and teams had evidence about whether the change was ready to move forward.
Cortex 4.7 improved post-change validation by helping code changes align with project quality, build, test, and review expectations. It supported validation summaries, residual issue visibility, affected file awareness, and clearer readiness signals.
The release also introduced stronger repository-aware guidance. Enterprise teams often have project-specific standards, security practices, remediation preferences, and review expectations. Cortex moved toward an agent experience that can adapt to a team’s repository and engineering preferences.
Security remediation also became more contextual. Traditional tools often stop at the finding. Cortex 4.7 strengthened the lifecycle from finding to remediation to revalidation, including finding-level status, residual risk, false-positive handling, and security regression thinking.
The release also expanded attention to dependency and infrastructure risk. Modern application security includes dependencies, configurations, infrastructure definitions, cloud resources, containers, and policy-sensitive artifacts.
Cortex 4.7 helps reduce the gap between AI-generated suggestions and production-ready outcomes. It supports safer coding workflows, stronger validation practices, contextual remediation, and better handling of supply chain and infrastructure risk.
Cortex 4.8: Enterprise AI Control Layer for iPhone
Cortex 4.8 brought the Enterprise AI Control Layer to iPhone.
If Android opened the mobile edge for Cortex, iPhone expanded that vision to another critical part of the modern workday. Many leaders, developers, security teams, architects, and enterprise users carry iPhone through meetings, travel, incident response, customer conversations, and daily decision making.
The iPhone application delivered a dedicated Cortex experience for mobile use. Users could start new conversations, continue existing work, manage threads, restore prior sessions, and interact with Cortex through a polished mobile interface.
The release also introduced iPhone-ready sign-in and subscription support. Apple Sign-In made onboarding familiar for iPhone users, while Apple subscription flows and existing Stripe-based options gave users and organizations flexibility in how they manage access.
Privacy remained central. Cortex 4.8 brought the same privacy-first approach to iOS, helping users review messages and attachments before sharing content with AI services.
Connected enterprise context also carried forward. Cortex 4.8 was not designed as a generic mobile chatbot. It was designed as another access point into the broader Enterprise AI Control Layer, supporting enterprise-aware assistance, developer workflows, cloud context, collaboration tools, and security-oriented prompts where permitted.
Security workflows on the go became another important part of the iPhone story. Cortex 4.8 helped users reason through risks, controls, exposures, and follow-up actions from a mobile device.
The release also improved onboarding, authentication, account management, session reliability, voice interactions, message handling, settings, subscription readiness, and mobile usability.
For organizations, the message was clear. Cortex could now support both major mobile ecosystems while maintaining a consistent enterprise AI posture.
June also included a broader storytelling milestone: four short videos focused on Enterprise AI Mobility. These videos connected the month’s product updates into one clear narrative. Cortex is evolving from isolated AI assistance into a secure, governed, always-available control layer for engineering and security teams. Cortex is not simply becoming available on more devices. It is becoming more useful across the moments where enterprise decisions, security reviews, engineering follow-up, and operational work actually happen.
Cortex 4.9: Enterprise AI Across Every Major Browser
June closed with Cortex 4.9, which extended Cortex to Safari and completed a major browser milestone.
With Safari support, Cortex now reaches users across Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Firefox, and Safari. That matters because enterprises rarely standardize around a single browser. Some teams use Chrome, others rely on Edge, developers may prefer Firefox, and Apple-first users often stay within Safari.
Safari support is more than a browser checkbox. Apple’s extension ecosystem works differently from Chrome, Edge, and Firefox, so Cortex 4.9 introduced a Safari-ready experience aligned with the macOS app and Safari extension model.
For users, Cortex can be opened from Safari, connected to the active page, and used as an assistant while working in the browser. This brings AI assistance into the page experience for reviewing, asking, summarizing, scanning, and reasoning with context.
Cortex 4.9 also strengthened Apple-first workflows through Apple-aware sign-in and subscription support across the Safari extension experience. This built directly on the iPhone direction introduced with Cortex 4.8.
The broader Apple ecosystem expansion is important. iPhone brings Cortex to mobile users, while Safari brings secure AI assistance into Apple’s desktop browser experience. Apple Sign-In, Apple subscription support, account management, privacy controls, and Safari extension readiness all point in the same direction: easier adoption for Apple-first teams.
Cortex 4.9 also reinforced enterprise trust through stronger account and session continuity, authentication flows, subscription handling, browser-extension callbacks, client session continuity, Apple provider handling, privacy policies, terms, account management, and account deletion paths.
Security remained part of the browser story. Cortex for Safari included security prompt guardrails that help users pause before sending prompts that may lead to risky implementation behavior. When a request touches authentication, authorization, secrets, data exposure, injection risk, or unsafe configuration, Cortex can guide the user toward safer constraints.
By the end of June, Cortex supported Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Safari in the browser; VS Code, Visual Studio, and IntelliJ in the IDE; and mobile access through Android and iPhone. That is a major step toward universal access across the modern software and security workspace.
June Newsroom Momentum
June was also an important month for market visibility.
The newsroom reflected the same product momentum, with press coverage around Cortex 4.7, Cortex 4.8, and Cortex 4.9. These announcements reinforced the public story behind the product progression: trusted agentic engineering, enterprise AI on iPhone, and enterprise AI across every major browser.
That external visibility matters because the Cortex story is no longer limited to individual features. It is becoming a broader market narrative around Enterprise AI Control Layer, secure agentic engineering, mobility, validation, privacy, and enterprise adoption.
June showed that Pervaziv AI is not simply shipping product updates. It is building a consistent category narrative around how enterprises can adopt AI safely across engineering and security workflows.
The Bigger June Story: Mobility With Control
The most important theme from June 2026 is mobility with control.
Mobility alone is not enough. A mobile chatbot does not solve enterprise AI adoption. A browser extension alone does not create governance. A coding assistant alone does not guarantee secure software delivery. A generated fix alone does not prove risk has been reduced.
Enterprise teams need something more complete.
They need AI that is available across devices and environments, but also secure, contextual, validated, privacy-aware, and governed. They need continuity across sessions, privacy scanning before sensitive information is shared, validation after code changes, and security workflows that move from finding to fix to verification.
That is what June advanced.
Cortex 4.4 strengthened the connected security workspace.
Cortex 4.5 brought secure agentic engineering to Android.
Cortex 4.7 advanced validation, remediation, and trusted agentic engineering.
Cortex 4.8 brought the Enterprise AI Control Layer to iPhone.
The Enterprise AI Mobility videos connected the product story into a clear market narrative.
Cortex 4.9 extended Cortex to Safari and completed a major browser expansion across Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Safari.
Together, these releases moved Cortex closer to a practical goal: enterprise AI wherever work happens, with the trust, context, continuity, and control organizations require.
Looking Ahead
June 2026 showed that the future of enterprise AI is not confined to one interface.
The next phase of adoption will span IDEs, browsers, phones, cloud consoles, code repositories, collaboration systems, security dashboards, and enterprise workflows. The platforms that matter will do more than generate answers. They will preserve context, protect sensitive information, validate outcomes, and help teams coordinate action across tools and devices.
Cortex continues to move in that direction.
From the connected workspace improvements in Cortex 4.4, to Android mobility in Cortex 4.5, trusted validation in Cortex 4.7, iPhone support in Cortex 4.8, mobility storytelling through short-form videos, and Safari support in Cortex 4.9, June became the month Cortex expanded from a dependable Enterprise AI Control Layer into a broader Enterprise AI Mobility platform.
The message is simple: enterprise AI should move with the team, follow the workflow, protect privacy, preserve context, and support secure decisions wherever work happens.
That is the path Cortex advanced in June, and that is the direction Pervaziv AI continues to build toward: secure, governed, mobile, and trusted Enterprise AI for modern engineering and security teams.


