Singapore – Cohesity has announced Cohesity Maestro, a new offering designed to make its data security, cyber resilience, and AI-powered search capabilities accessible through enterprise AI workflows via the Model Context Protocol (MCP).
The company said Maestro extends access to capabilities available within the Cohesity Data Cloud, including cyber resilience operations, real-time telemetry, autonomous agents, and Cohesity Gaia, its AI-powered enterprise search and knowledge engine. According to Cohesity, the platform introduces what it describes as a headless architecture for cyber resilience, enabling key actions, telemetry signals, and data assets to be accessed and managed through AI agents without requiring users to interact directly with a Cohesity interface.
Built on the open MCP standard, Cohesity Maestro is designed to integrate with AI platforms such as ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. The company said the approach allows enterprises to connect Cohesity services to their existing AI environments without requiring custom integrations or proprietary connectors.
“Our customers have already chosen,” said Sanjay Poonen, CEO, Cohesity. “Claude, Gemini, and GPT already run operations on these platforms, which grow in capability every day. Cohesity Maestro gives those platforms direct access to our data protection capabilities. No new console. No workflow changes. Just the power of Cohesity, wherever their AI already lives. This is what headless data protection looks like, and Cohesity is the first in our industry to deliver it.”
The launch builds on Cohesity’s existing AI initiatives, including Cohesity Copilot, introduced in 2024 to provide natural-language administration for data protection tasks, and Cohesity RecoveryAgent, launched in 2025 to support cyber recovery orchestration.
According to the company, Maestro is intended to support organisations that have already adopted AI platforms and are building workflows around them. Cohesity said the platform is designed to operate within customer-defined AI environments while maintaining existing role-based access controls, authentication requirements, and audit frameworks.
The company said IT and security teams will be able to use AI tools to review environmental changes, identify risks and recovery gaps, trigger restores, conduct threat hunting, and orchestrate recovery actions without switching to separate management consoles.
Cohesity said Maestro will provide access to several platform capabilities, including cyber resilience orchestration functions such as protection, restores, reporting, recovery groups, blueprints, and threat hunting. It will also surface real-time telemetry and security signals within AI workflows.
In addition, Cohesity Gaia will provide semantic search capabilities across protected data using NVIDIA-powered enterprise AI and metadata cataloging technology. Customers will also be able to access Cohesity AI agents, including Copilot for conversational reporting and operational actions, and RecoveryAgent for orchestrating recovery groups and blueprints.
The company said the platform is intended to support future autonomous business resilience use cases, where AI agents could detect issues, determine responses, and execute actions without human intervention.
Cohesity stated that Copilot and RecoveryAgent are currently available, while Cohesity Gaia already supports MCP. The Cohesity Maestro MCP interface and additional AI agents are expected to become available later this year, with early access programs planned for interested customers.

