Jensen Huang poured $10 billion into CUDA over a decade when no market existed for it. Investors called it a waste. He called it inevitable.
The same pattern is visible in SecOps today.
OpenClaw's rapid adoption despite known security vulnerabilities shows demand for operational AI has already outpaced the platforms built to govern it.
That gap between demand and safe infrastructure is exactly where market disruptions live.
Most AI in the SOC occupies the advisory lane: parsing logs, surfacing alerts, handing next steps back to an analyst.
LimaCharlie's Agentic SecOps Workspace was built on a different premise: AI should be a governed operator, not a consultant.
Because the platform is API-first, agents access every platform function with the same permissions model applied to human analysts, full audit trails, and fine-grained access controls that define exactly what each agent can read, write, and execute.
Organizations that build on foundations designed for autonomous operation now will hold the same structural advantage Nvidia held when the AI boom arrived.
Read the full post: https://limacharlie.io/
