SentinelOne, the AI Security Leader, announced a significant multi-year collaboration with Google Cloud to develop solutions that strengthen cyber defense.
SentinelOne is an established, strategic Google Security partner with validated integrations across Google Security Operations, Google Threat Intelligence, and Chrome Enterprise. The collaboration will deliver new solutions that integrate SentinelOne’s leading EDR, security for AI apps and agents, and an AI-native platform with Google Cloud’s global-scale infrastructure and threat intelligence.
Expanded Global Footprint and Shared Focus on Data Sovereignty
Enterprises operating across regulated markets need security that works everywhere they do — without forcing tradeoffs between coverage, compliance, and control. SentinelOne’s Singularity Platform is now available across three strategic Google Cloud regions: North America, Frankfurt, and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The collaboration seeks to support AI-powered security with in-country data residency and alignment with regional regulatory frameworks. The expanded footprint underscores SentinelOne’s deep investment in Google Cloud infrastructure and its commitment to helping joint customers secure critical workloads and AI initiatives at a global scale.
SentinelOne is also collaborating with Google Cloud on AI security solutions that protect the full AI stack and give enterprises the confidence to adopt GenAI across the organization.
The endpoint is still the most critical and most targeted attack surface in the enterprise, yet too many organizations remain dependent on legacy antivirus and first-generation EDR tools that were never built for AI-driven attacks, cloud-scale environments, or the speed of modern adversaries. These incumbent solutions create the exact fragmentation and blind spots that attackers count on. SentinelOne is giving these organizations a clear path forward: AI-powered, autonomous EDR that delivers 100% detection with zero delays, and designed to integrate seamlessly with Google Cloud environments, so customers can replace legacy tooling without rearchitecting their security operations. As the companies deepen integrations, customers can expect tighter workflows that make it simpler to consolidate fragmented security tooling around enhanced EDR and an autonomous SOC.

