Gravitee's Gamma release matters because it treats AI agents as governed production infrastructure. The deeper move is not just an AI gateway. It is the fusion of agent management, authorization, identity, and API control into one platform.

What Launched

Gravitee published Gamma on June 2, 2026 and updated the post on June 9, 2026. Gravitee describes Gamma as a platform to secure and control every agent, API, and event, with dedicated Agent Management, Authorization Management, AI Gateway, and identity and access capabilities for AI agents.

That packaging is the real story. Instead of treating agents as an isolated AI surface, Gravitee is placing them inside the same operational vocabulary platform teams already use for APIs and events: trust, access, authorization, governance, and control.

Why This Tooling Shift Matters

Zero-human companies will not be built on prompt quality alone. They will need secure identities for software workers, fine-grained access, traffic control, and enforcement boundaries across every tool and service an agent touches.

Gamma reads like an admission that the real infrastructure problem is no longer just model routing. It is lifecycle control over autonomous actors. Once an agent can call APIs, touch data, and trigger events, it starts looking less like a chatbot and more like a new category of enterprise principal.

The European Governance Angle

Gravitee's Lille roots also matter. Europe has often been caricatured as the region that regulates AI while others ship it. Gamma suggests a more useful interpretation: European vendors may end up owning meaningful parts of the trust and governance stack that autonomous firms depend on.

That is a real competitive position. If the agent economy expands, somebody has to provide the control plane that keeps autonomous systems legible to security, compliance, and platform teams.

The Take

Gravitee Gamma suggests that agent tooling is converging with platform engineering. The most important tools will not only help teams call models. They will help teams decide who an agent is, what it can reach, how it is routed, and how its actions stay inside policy.

That is what trustworthy zero-human infrastructure looks like.

Related: See our previous research on AI gateway routing, Cloudflare Agents SDK, and OpenAI's agent infrastructure.