The browser is the new endpoint
For most knowledge workers, the browser is where work happens. Email, CRM, docs, dashboards, AI tools - everything runs in a tab. But the browser was never designed to be a managed enterprise tool. It was built for consumers.
That disconnect creates a real problem for IT teams. Employees are accessing sensitive SaaS apps, copying data between tabs, uploading files to personal accounts, and pasting proprietary information into AI tools - all inside a browser that IT has no visibility into.
A secure enterprise browser closes that gap.
What a secure enterprise browser actually does
A secure enterprise browser is a purpose-built browser that gives organizations control over how employees interact with web-based apps, without replacing their existing tools or workflows.
It is not a VPN. It is not a virtual desktop. It is a browser designed for work that IT can manage like any other enterprise application.
Here is what it typically provides:
- Visibility into browser activity - IT can see which apps are being used, how data is moving between tabs, and where potential risks exist.
- Policy enforcement - Admins can set rules around copy/paste, downloads, uploads, screenshots, and printing - per app, per user, or per group.
- Identity-aware access - The browser ties into your identity provider, so access decisions are based on who the user is and what device they are on.
- Data protection built in - Instead of bolting on separate data protection tools after the fact, a secure enterprise browser handles it natively at the point of interaction.
- Zero disruption to users - The browser looks and works like any modern browser. Employees do not need to change how they work.
Why traditional security tools fall short
Most enterprise security stacks were built for a different era - one where apps lived on-premises and traffic flowed through a corporate network. But today, SaaS apps are accessed directly from the browser, often from personal or unmanaged devices.
Traditional approaches have real limitations:
- Network proxies can inspect traffic, but they cannot see what happens inside the browser tab. They miss copy/paste, AI prompts, and client-side interactions entirely.
- Endpoint agents add complexity and do not cover unmanaged devices. They also cannot enforce browser-level policies without heavy configuration.
- Virtual desktops solve isolation but create a terrible user experience. Latency, resolution issues, and lack of local app integration make them a last resort.
A secure enterprise browser sits at the exact point where the user meets the application. It does not need to reconstruct context from network logs or endpoint telemetry - it already has it.
What makes dME different
dME is a secure enterprise browser built specifically for the way modern teams work. It is not a locked-down environment or a surveillance tool. It is a browser that gives IT the controls they need while keeping the experience fast and familiar for employees.
Key things that set dME apart:
- Chromium-based - Employees get the same rendering engine they already know. Extensions, bookmarks, and workflows carry over.
- AI-aware policies - dME lets you set rules specifically for AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Copilot. Control what data can be pasted, which tools are allowed, and how prompts are handled.
- Deploy in minutes - No infrastructure to set up. No agents to install on endpoints. Push the browser through your MDM or let users download it directly.
- Works alongside your existing stack - dME integrates with your identity provider, your SIEM, and your compliance tools. It does not replace them.
The bottom line
The browser is the most important application in your stack - and the least managed. A secure enterprise browser fixes that by putting IT in control of the one place where all SaaS, AI, and web activity happens.
dME gives you that control without making employees feel like they are being watched or slowed down. It is security that works with people, not against them.