1 min read
|
Saved February 14, 2026
|
Copied!
Do you care about this?
The article discusses new hooks in Cursor that let organizations customize and enhance the agent loop with scripts. These hooks help integrate Cursor with various security and compliance tools, improving oversight and control. Several partners are highlighted for their specific integrations, covering areas like code security, dependency management, and secrets management.
If you do, here's more
Earlier this year, Cursor introduced hooks that allow organizations to monitor and modify their agent loop through custom scripts. These hooks operate at defined stages of the agent’s process, enabling users to observe, block, or alter behaviors. Many clients have connected these hooks to their security tools, observability platforms, secrets managers, and compliance systems. To facilitate this, Cursor has partnered with various vendors who have integrated hooks support into their offerings.
The partners specialize in different areas: MintMCP focuses on governance and visibility, using hooks to inventory MCP servers and monitor tool usage for sensitive data. Oasis Security enhances their platform by enforcing least-privilege policies through hooks, while Runlayer centralizes control over agent-tool interactions. For code security, Corridor provides real-time feedback on security design as code is written, and Semgrep scans AI-generated code for vulnerabilities, prompting the agent to regenerate code until issues are fixed. In terms of dependency security, Endor Labs intercepts package installations to prevent malicious dependencies from entering the codebase.
For agent safety, Snyk uses hooks to monitor agent actions and stop threats like prompt injection. In the realm of secrets management, 1Password validates that necessary environment files are mounted before executing commands, allowing for secure, on-demand access without storing credentials on disk. Organizations looking to implement Cursor with advanced features can reach out for assistance. There’s also an invitation to submit hook integrations through a provided form.
Questions about this article
No questions yet.