What's Happening?
Anthropic has announced the addition of two new features to its Claude Managed Agents: self-hosted sandboxes and MCP tunnels. These features are designed to provide companies with greater control over the execution of AI agent tools within their own infrastructure.
The self-hosted sandboxes allow companies to run AI tools on their own systems, ensuring that files and repositories remain within their environment. This setup maintains existing security measures such as network policies and audit logging. Companies can choose their own CPU, memory, and runtime image, or opt for managed providers like Cloudflare and Vercel. The MCP tunnels enable secure connections to internal databases and APIs through encrypted channels, without exposing them to the public internet. Despite these advancements, Anthropic retains control over the agent orchestration, which remains on its servers. Both features are in early stages, with self-hosted sandboxes available as a public beta and MCP tunnels as a research preview.
Why It's Important?
The introduction of self-hosted sandboxes and MCP tunnels by Anthropic represents a significant step in AI infrastructure management, offering companies enhanced security and control over their AI operations. By allowing tool execution within a company's own infrastructure, businesses can better protect sensitive data and maintain compliance with internal security protocols. This development is particularly relevant for industries that handle confidential information, such as finance and healthcare, where data privacy is paramount. Additionally, the ability to connect AI agents to internal systems without public exposure reduces the risk of data breaches. However, the fact that Anthropic retains control over the agent orchestration may limit the appeal for companies seeking full autonomy over their AI deployments.
What's Next?
As these features are still in early testing phases, Anthropic will likely gather feedback from participating companies to refine and enhance the offerings. The success of the public beta for self-hosted sandboxes and the research preview for MCP tunnels will determine the pace at which these features are rolled out more broadly. Companies interested in these capabilities will need to request access and may influence future iterations through their feedback. Additionally, as more businesses adopt these features, there could be increased demand for similar solutions from other AI service providers, potentially driving innovation and competition in the AI infrastructure space.











