
Golf
Enterprise MCP Control Plane
581 followers
Enterprise MCP Control Plane
581 followers
Golf is the enterprise control plane for MCP. It gives security and IT teams full visibility into how AI connects to enterprise systems β with policy enforcement, real-time threat blocking, and a complete audit trail. Discover, enforce, audit. End-to-end.
This is the 2nd launch from Golf. View more
Golf
Launching today
Govern and secure AI agents and MCP servers with centralized visibility, policy control, and audit trails. Security, compliance, and control for the agentic era.





Payment Required
Launch Team / Built With




Golf
The "no end-to-end governance layer" observation is exactly right β most enterprise MCP security today is point solutions bolted on. The question that gets interesting at scale: how does Golf handle agent identity in multi-agent chains? If an orchestrator spawns five sub-agents that each call MCP tools, does the audit trail attribute actions to the orchestrator, each sub-agent individually, or the human session that triggered the chain? That attribution layer seems like the hardest part to get right β and the one that makes the difference between a compliance checkbox and a tool a SOC team actually trusts.
Golf
@giammboΒ Great question! Golf governs employees connecting your internal systems to third-party AI tools via MCP. Think an engineer using Cursor or Claude Desktop hitting your internal Notion, GitHub, or production database through MCP. In that case, you don't control anything - neither the agent, nor the tools your employees are connecting to them.
In that model, attribution is actually clean: every MCP tool call is tied to a real employee identity through your IDP. The audit trail shows you which person, using which agent, called which tool, on which system β with the full request and response. When compliance asks, "who let Claude touch customer data last Tuesday?" - you have a name, a timestamp, and the exact action.
Golf
@vouchyΒ Yeah, honestly, not sure who was more surprised, us or them. The scanner doesn't lie though π