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AnonUser-permissioned integrations that let AI agents access services without native APIs.

4.6 (5)
Daniel NikulshynReviewed by Daniel Nikulshyn·Updated June 2026

Overview

Anon provides solutions for deploying AI agents from small businesses to the Fortune 500. Its implementations take AI agents from demo-ware to production work, allowing them to automate long-running enterprise workflows and beat human team service level agreements (SLAs). The platform's products include self-healing browser agents, hosted web agents, and an agent authentication toolkit that enables AI agents to authenticate and act as users across services without native APIs. This is achieved through user-permissioned integrations, enabling seamless access to various services and systems in finance, healthcare, insurance, and more. Anon's approach to software development emphasizes building like a factory, leveraging best-in-class tools, and optimizing for real-world businesses and outcomes, rather than just demo-ready solutions.

Key features

  • Secure credential and session management
  • User consent and permission flows
  • SDKs for agent developers
  • Cross-service integration coverage
  • Authentication brokering
  • Built for autonomous AI agents

Pricing

Model
Free
Rating
4.6 / 5 (5)

Use cases

Connect AI agents to no-API services

Enable autonomous agents to take actions on third-party platforms that lack public APIs by brokering authenticated sessions on behalf of consenting users.

Add user-permissioned auth to agent apps

Use Anon's SDKs to implement consent flows and securely manage user credentials, letting your agent act with scoped permissions across services.

Ship autonomous workflows faster

Skip building custom integrations for each service by relying on Anon's authentication brokering and session management layer.

Cross-service automation for end users

Build agents that coordinate actions across multiple online accounts a user already has, without requiring those services to offer developer APIs.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Unlocks services without public APIs
  • User-permissioned auth model
  • Reduces custom integration work
  • Developer-focused SDKs
  • Handles session and credential security

Cons

  • Targeted at developers, not end users
  • Depends on third-party site stability
  • Limited to supported integrations
  • Requires careful handling of user trust

Reviews

4.6

Average from 5 ratings.

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S

Sofia Lindqvist

May 27, 2026

Does the job

Pretty happy overall. Built for autonomous AI agents just works and handles session and credential security. but no dealbreakers — I'd recommend it to a friend without hesitating.

F

Frank Müller

May 13, 2026

Does the job

Pretty happy overall. Secure credential and session management just works and developer-focused SDKs. Limited to supported integrations can be annoying, but no dealbreakers — I'd recommend it to a friend without hesitating.

E

Elena Rossi

May 4, 2026

Compared a few options

Evaluated this against two competitors. Where it wins: sDKs for agent developers and reduces custom integration work. Where it lags: requires careful handling of user trust. On balance the feature set — especially built for autonomous AI agents — justifies the 5 stars for our use case.

R

Rina Desai

Apr 7, 2026

Compared a few options

Evaluated this against two competitors. Where it wins: sDKs for agent developers and developer-focused SDKs. Where it lags: depends on third-party site stability. On balance the feature set — especially sDKs for agent developers — justifies the 4 stars for our use case.

L

Leila Hassan

Jan 3, 2026

Use it every day

Honestly didn't expect to like it this much. Built for autonomous AI agents is exactly what I needed, and user-permissioned auth model. I do wish requires careful handling of user trust, but I reach for it almost every day now and it just clicks.

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