Ayesha Dissanayaka

Associate Director/Architect
Ayesha Dissanayaka

Ayesha is an Associate Director/Architect at WSO2 and is a key member of the WSO2 identity and access management team. She focuses on the domain of identity management and computer security. She has also won customer trust via multiple consulting channels where she helped them build their solutions in the identity domain as well as by using other WSO2 products.

She holds a B.Sc. in Computer Science & Engineering from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka. As part of her final year project she was engaged in developing a Video Processing Framework, namely NoobaVSS (http://www.noobavss.info/), which is a free and open source smart video surveillance system.

She enjoys playing tennis, listening to music, reading, traveling, and having adventures.

Read Ayesha's blogs at http://asadistechspace.blogspot.com and http://asadispace.blogspot.com

Content published by Ayesha Dissanayaka

BLOG 22 Jan, 2026

Why AI Agents Need Their Own Identity: Lessons from OWASP's MCP Security Guide

  • Ayesha Dissanayaka
  • Associate Director/Architect - WSO2
Identity and Access Management
BLOG 23 Dec, 2025
Identity and Access Management AI
BLOG 22 Oct, 2025

Bad Actors are Harnessing the Power of AI—Is Your Identity Defense Ready?

  • Ayesha Dissanayaka
  • Associate Director/Architect - WSO2
AI
BLOG 25 Aug, 2025

The Silent Security Problem of AI Agents: Bridging the IAM Gap

  • Ayesha Dissanayaka
  • Associate Director/Architect - WSO2
Identity and Access Management AI
BLOG 15 May, 2025

Securing AI Interactions: Crossing the Hurdles of MCP Authorization

  • Ayesha Dissanayaka
  • Associate Director/Architect - WSO2
Identity and Access Management AI
BLOG 07 Aug, 2023

Transforming User Experiences By Leveraging CIAM

  • Ayesha Dissanayaka
  • Associate Director/Architect - WSO2
Identity and Access Management
BLOG 11 Oct, 2019

REST APIs - What and Why?

  • Ayesha Dissanayaka
  • Associate Director/Architect - WSO2