Cursor is now allowing companies to run its AI coding agents on their own infrastructure rather than Cursor's cloud. This self-hosted model keeps source code, build artifacts, and tool execution within a company's own environment, addressing security and compliance concerns common in regulated industries. Agents still coordinate through Cursor's cloud, but execution happens locally. The feature supports up to 10 workers per user and 50 per team, with larger deployments available on request. Early adopters include Notion and Brex. The move is part of Cursor's broader push to expand enterprise adoption, as it competes with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google in the agentic coding space. Cursor also recently released Composer 2, its own model built on Moonshot AI's Kimi K2.5, though its origins drew scrutiny after not being disclosed at launch.

6m read timeFrom thenewstack.io
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Bringing agents closer to the codeIn high demandFrontier territory

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