Own the naming layer for AI access control: agent permissions, RBAC for autonomous agents, and developer identity in an agent-first world.
Looking to acquire this domain?
We are open to a direct sale and to partnership opportunities or joint ventures to develop this premium domain. Reach out and we'll respond with next steps.
Why this domain
role.dev names the exact primitive that decides what an AI agent is allowed to do. As autonomous agents start touching real systems - filing tickets, moving money, editing infrastructure - the unanswered question becomes governance: which role, which scopes, which guardrails. Roles and RBAC are the vocabulary security teams already trust, now stretched to cover non-human identities. Identity vendors, agent-infra startups, and platform-security teams are scrambling to define this layer. A one-word .dev on the core concept reads instantly to the developers and CISOs who buy it. The identity and access management market is heading past $25B by 2030, and agent identity is its fastest-emerging frontier.
A strategic buyer builds role.dev into the control plane for agent permissions - a place to define, scope, and audit what every human and AI identity may execute. Zero-trust vendors, agent-orchestration platforms, and developer-identity startups win by making least-privilege effortless for autonomous workloads. The domain is short enough to live in code, docs, and dashboards, and semantically precise enough that it needs no explanation. Subdomains can carry policy APIs, an audit console, or role catalogs, while the root asserts category ownership. For a company defining how organizations grant, revoke, and monitor agent access, role.dev is both the brand and a plain-language statement of what the product does.
The trajectory is clear: every enterprise deploying agents will need machine-identity governance, and the tooling around it is still being named. role.dev can become the default term for that discipline - the domain a security startup scales into as agent fleets move from pilots to production. Non-human identities already outnumber human ones in many environments, and generative agents accelerate that gap sharply. Whoever owns the clearest, most credible name captures the developers writing policies today and the enterprises standardizing on them tomorrow. Securing the exact-match concept now is a cheap hedge against a category that is about to matter enormously.
Perfect for
Define and scope what each AI agent is authorized to execute in real systems.
Bring least-privilege role-based access control to autonomous agent fleets.
Govern, rotate, and audit non-human identities across an enterprise stack.
A developer-facing identity platform where roles map cleanly to code.
Asking price $180,000 USD, also available for joint venture. Contact info@role.dev to acquire this domain.