About the RoleWe are looking for a deeply technical Product Manager to help build Codex security controls and the partner ecosystem around them.
This role focuses on securing
Codex itself: how identity, permissions, tools, MCP servers, repositories, secrets, networks, and high-impact actions are governed across Codex products.
You will also help define standard interfaces through which authorized customer and partner systems can provide security context, inspect activity, return policy decisions, receive telemetry, and initiate bounded responses.
You will work closely with Codex product and engineering, OpenAI Security and Safety, enterprise customers, and partners across application security, identity, cloud security, data security, infrastructure, and security operations.
In this Role you WillBuild native security controls for CodexPartner with engineering, design, security, and safety teams to develop controls for:
- Identity, roles, permissions, and tenant isolation.
- Access to repositories, files, tools, MCP servers, secrets, networks, and infrastructure.
- Read, write, execute, and deployment authority.
- Human and policy-based approvals.
- Prompt-injection and untrusted-content defenses.
- Audit trails, provenance, stop conditions, revocation, and rollback.
Help establish a graduated authority model in which local, read-only, and reversible actions require less friction than actions involving production systems, credentials, sensitive data, or irreversible changes.
Define partner interfacesDevelop common, versioned interfaces that allow customer-selected security products to participate in Codex workflows.
These interfaces may support:
- Sharing trusted identity, task, resource, and environment context.
- Inspecting code, commands, artifacts, tool calls, or planned actions.
- Returning allow, deny, constrain, or require-approval decisions.
- Exporting normalized execution and security telemetry.
- Pausing activity, revoking access, or requiring reauthorization.
Define clear requirements for authentication, authorization, customer consent, data minimization, latency, retries, failure behavior, auditability, and backwards compatibility.
Ensure integrations use shared platform contracts rather than creating a different Codex architecture for every partner.
Build the partner ecosystemWork directly with security vendors and enterprise design partners to turn the interfaces into production integrations.
Create partner SDKs, reference implementations, technical documentation, test environments, conformance suites, and certification requirements.
Prioritize partners based on customer value, technical relevance, deployment readiness, and their ability to improve the shared platform-not simply logo value or launch timing.
Turn lessons from individual partner engagements into reusable product capabilities.
Shape the customer experienceDefine how enterprise administrators configure and understand Codex security controls, including:
- Policies by user, workspace, repository, environment, tool, or action.
- Approved security providers and permitted data sharing.
- Approval requirements and time-limited exceptions.
- Policy inheritance and conflict resolution.
- Audit, investigation, and incident-response workflows.
Ensure developers receive clear, actionable explanations when an action is blocked or requires approval, rather than an opaque policy error.
Establish evaluation and launch gatesWork with security, safety, research, and engineering teams to test whether controls work under realistic and adversarial conditions.
Evaluate risks such as permission bypass, prompt injection, malicious tools, secret exposure, cross-tenant access, stale authorization, partner outages, conflicting decisions, and incomplete audit evidence.
Help determine when new Codex capabilities have sufficient controls, reliability, and usability for broader deployment.
You Might Thrive in This Role If You- Have built enterprise security, developer-platform, infrastructure, or control-plane products.
- Understand identity, authorization, sandboxing, secrets, tool use, APIs, and audit systems.
- Think naturally in terms of trust boundaries, failure modes, and abuse paths.
- Can balance security, developer productivity, latency, reliability, and customer control.
- Have experience building integrations across complex enterprise systems or partner ecosystems.
- Can turn conflicting partner requirements into a coherent platform.
- Communicate credibly with developers, security architects, CISOs, researchers, and partner product teams.
- Prefer measurable security outcomes and real adoption over demonstrations or integration announcements.
Nice to Have- Experience in application security, identity, cloud security, data security, source control, CI/CD, SIEM, or enterprise governance.
- Familiarity with RBAC, ABAC, policy-as-code, OAuth, OIDC, workload identity, or secrets management.
- Experience with AI agents, MCP, sandboxed execution, prompt-injection defenses, or agent-security evaluations.
- Experience building SDKs, developer platforms, integration marketplaces, or certification programs.
What Success Looks LikeDuring your first six months, you will have helped establish:
- A clear roadmap for native Codex controls and partner-extensible controls.
- A common architecture for security context, policy decisions, inspection, telemetry, and response.
- Initial reference integrations with a focused group of partners.
- Evaluation and launch criteria for high-risk Codex capabilities.
- Baseline measures for control coverage, bypass resistance, latency, reliability, and developer experience.
During your first year, you will have helped ship meaningful controls across sensitive Codex workflows, brought standardized partner interfaces into production use, and demonstrated that enterprises can grant Codex greater authority without sacrificing visibility, control, or accountability.