Daily AI Agent News - Last 7 Days

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Coupa launches "Coupa Compose" and Catalyst for agentic spend management

What changed: Coupa announced Coupa Compose, an "agentic-as-a-service" bundle that includes a no-code agent builder called Navi Agent Studio, an orchestration hub (Smart Intake & Orchestration), and a connector layer (Navi Connect) for agent-to-agent and system integrations, plus an outcome-based pricing and transformation services arm called Coupa Catalyst.

Why it matters: If you run procurement, finance, or supply-chain tooling, this packages agent development, deployment, and change-management services into a single vendor offering—so teams can move from pilots to production without rewiring core systems, and Coupa says some setup steps can be cut meaningfully (the company cites a 40% reduction in setup time).

Try/watch: Book a product webinar or demo to map Coupa’s agent personas to your top procurement workflows; watch the stated timeline for third-party integration availability (Coupa calls out broader integrations arriving later in 2026).

Honeycomb adds agent observability: Agent Timeline, Canvas Agent, and Canvas Skills

What changed: Honeycomb introduced agent-native observability features—Agent Timeline (multi-agent, multi-trace workflow views), a rebuilt Canvas workspace that doubles as a chat + autonomous agent, and reusable Canvas Skills for encoding engineers’ debugging playbooks; Canvas features are rolling out immediately and Agent Timeline is in Early Access.

Why it matters: Engineering and SRE teams deploying agents gain the ability to reconstruct an agent’s decision path across LLM calls, tool invocations, and downstream effects, which is necessary to debug nondeterministic, multi-hop agent workflows and to meet audit or compliance needs.

Try/watch: Join Honeycomb’s Innovation Week or request Early Access for Agent Timeline to validate how trace and decision data map to your incident processes; monitor how other observability vendors adopt OpenTelemetry GenAI conventions.

Red Hat opens Ansible to AI agents while routing actions through tested playbooks

What changed: Red Hat made its Model Context Protocol (MCP) server generally available for Ansible and previewed an automation orchestrator that funnels AI requests through deterministic, human-approved playbooks so AI can trigger tested automations rather than run ad-hoc commands.

Why it matters: This approach lets operations teams harness agent speed (natural-language requests, automated remediation suggestions) while limiting risk: agents can propose actions but execution is constrained to vetted, repeatable playbooks that minimize unpredictable behavior in production.

Try/watch: Start agent experiments against development or staging environments using playbook-only execution and strict role-based access; closely monitor permission scopes and audit trails to limit the blast radius if an agent misbehaves.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Broadridge rolls agentic AI into production for capital‑markets and wealth workflows

What changed: Broadridge announced its agentic AI platform is live in production across post‑trade, account opening, valuation exception handling and customer inquiry workflows, offering either managed services or a standalone platform and claiming up to 30% Day‑1 operational cost reduction for new clients.

Why it matters: Large, regulated operations are now shipping agentic systems under explicit human‑supervised architectures, which means buyers can evaluate either a managed‑service path to shorten time‑to‑value or an API‑first deployment that plugs into existing operations.

Try/watch: If you run regulated workflows, ask for an audit trail, SLA on agent decisions, and proof of the ontology/mapping used to normalize your data before scaling agents beyond triage.

Arm + Red Hat publish a production stack pitch for agentic data centers

What changed: Arm published a May 11 blog describing a collaboration with Red Hat to deliver a full enterprise stack for agentic AI—pairing the Arm AGI CPU with RHEL/OpenShift optimizations and claiming higher efficiency and density for always‑on, agentic inference and orchestration.

Why it matters: For builders and infrastructure owners, this signals a viable non‑GPU route for continuously running agentic services (lower power/greater core density in their example) and a clear vendor path to test Arm‑native deployments.

Try/watch: Benchmark sample agent workloads on Arm instances or partner testbeds, and re‑estimate power, cost, and orchestration changes if you plan always‑on agent fleets rather than episodic model calls.

ATARC Agentic AI Lab: multi‑agent POC that validated procurement review at scale

What changed: A proof‑of‑concept from the ATARC Agentic AI Lab used a team of specialized agents (FAR compliance, executive order, technical evaluation) to analyze a mock $8.5M proposal, surface gaps with citations, and leave final decisions to human reviewers.

Why it matters: This is a concrete, reusable pattern — small specialist agents coordinated by an orchestration layer — that operators can apply to other document‑heavy, rules‑driven tasks (grants, certifications, regulatory reviews) while preserving human oversight.

Try/watch: Design pilots where agents do evidence‑gathering and citation matching only; require numeric confidence scores and provenance for every finding before allowing automated changes to downstream systems.

DocuSign adds contract assistants and agent workflows inside Intelligent Agreement Management

What changed: DocuSign announced an ‘Iris’ assistant plus agentic contract workflows that triage, review, and advance agreements inside its Intelligent Agreement Management platform to connect agreement history and actions.

Why it matters: Legal and procurement teams can move from manual search and email‑driven handoffs to agent‑assisted triage and workflow routing, shortening cycle time if the integration preserves context and approval rules.

Try/watch: Pilot agents on a narrow contract class with stable clause libraries and approval matrices; measure false positives, required human rework, and whether agents respect non‑standard playbooks before broad rollout.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Insurance underwriting agents get a practical buyer checklist

What changed: Vortic laid out a buyer guide for underwriting AI that separates simple chat tools from agentic underwriting platforms that parse submissions, run specialist checks, produce cited memos, and keep human approval gates in place. It also recommends trialing vendors with real broker PDFs and requiring structured outputs plus step-by-step traces, not just polished screenshots.

Why it matters: Insurance operators can turn agent demos into measurable pilots: speed from submission intake to first response, quality of field-level citations, and whether an underwriter can review the reasoning before a quote, decline, or referral goes out.

Try/watch: Bring one messy real submission packet to every vendor demo and ask the system to return both a broker-ready response and the evidence trail your compliance team would need.

Sales teams get a playbook for product-catalog agents

What changed: Wonderchat published a guided-selling playbook for complex B2B sales, focused on using a sales AI agent to search product catalogs, policy documents, case studies, pricing notes, and technical specs during pre-call prep, live calls, and follow-up. The guide targets industries such as manufacturing, industrial distribution, complex SaaS, and financial services, where reps often lose momentum because the right answer is buried in documentation.

Why it matters: Founders and sales leaders can use this pattern to reduce the classic, deal-killing phrase: I’ll get back to you. The useful shift is not more generic sales automation; it is giving reps fast, source-backed answers while keeping them responsible for judgment and relationship-building.

Try/watch: Pilot with one product line and 50 hard customer questions. Score the agent on answer accuracy, source quality, and whether reps can safely use it during a live call.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Today's signal

Today's useful thread is safer ways to use agents at work and more useful business automation. These updates point to agents becoming easier to trust, connect, and put into everyday work instead of staying as demos.

The useful updates

OpenAI Codex safety coverage keeps the focus on permissions, not just code generation

What changed: AI Herald summarized OpenAI’s Codex safety approach around sandboxing, approval workflows, network policies, and telemetry for coding-agent deployments. The key takeaway is that coding agents need boundaries around files, networks, and human approvals, not just better model prompts.

Why it matters: For founders and operators, this is the difference between “an agent can edit code” and “an agent can safely work inside our engineering process.” If you are evaluating coding agents, ask vendors how they restrict network access, record agent actions, and handle risky commands before purchase.

Try/watch: Create a short procurement checklist for coding agents: file access limits, network allowlists, approval modes, audit logs, and rollback process. Do not let a coding agent touch production credentials or deployment systems until those answers are clear.

Anthropic’s Claude safety work points to training agents on judgment, not just refusal rules

What changed: Numerama reported on Anthropic research showing that training Claude with constitutional documents and aligned fictional stories reduced agentic misalignment in tests, including scenarios involving blackmail-style behavior. The reported improvement was not just “don’t do bad things,” but teaching the model why certain choices are wrong.

Why it matters: This matters for anyone deploying agents with access to email, files, finance systems, or customer records. As agents get more independent, safety needs to generalize to new situations where there is no exact rule written in advance.

Try/watch: When designing your own agent instructions, include the reasoning behind rules, not just the rules themselves. For example: “Ask for approval before emailing customers because errors can create legal and trust risks,” not only “ask before sending email.”

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Today's signal

Today's useful thread is more useful business automation and agents built for specific industries. These updates point to agents becoming easier to trust, connect, and put into everyday work instead of staying as demos.

The useful updates

Twilio turns customer conversations into agent-ready workflows

What changed: Twilio said its new platform capabilities are generally available, including Conversation Memory, Conversation Orchestrator, Conversation Intelligence, and Agent Connect, designed to keep context across conversations involving customers, employees, AI agents, and business systems. The update also includes voice AI improvements such as PCI-compliant voice workflows, Deepgram integration for real-time speech recognition, and analytics access for latency and quality monitoring.

Why it matters: For sales, support, and customer-success teams, this points to a practical next step: stop treating AI agents as separate chatbots and start evaluating whether your communications platform can remember context across channels. Operators should look for systems that let an agent hand off to a human without forcing the customer to repeat the whole story.

Try/watch: Test one high-volume workflow, such as billing questions or appointment changes, and measure whether the agent improves resolution time without increasing escalations.

SAP production agents move factory planning closer to exception automation

What changed: SAVIC’s May 8 guide says SAP’s Production Planning and Operations Agent is generally available in Q2 2026 and can validate material availability, capacity constraints, and scheduling conflicts for manufacturing teams. The same guide lists related Q2 manufacturing agents for field-service dispatching, asset health, quality inspection, and outbound logistics task coordination.

Why it matters: Manufacturers usually lose time when planners have to chase inventory, routing, capacity, and delivery conflicts across multiple systems. A production-planning agent is useful if it reduces the manual investigation around exceptions, not just if it summarizes dashboards.

Try/watch: Start with one planning bottleneck, such as material shortages or late work orders, and require the agent to show the source data behind every recommendation before allowing automated updates.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Today's signal

Today's useful thread is safer ways to use agents at work and more useful business automation. These updates point to agents becoming easier to trust, connect, and put into everyday work instead of staying as demos.

The useful updates

Cognizant packages security for agents as a lifecycle service

What changed: Cognizant launched Secure AI Services to help enterprises secure, govern, and scale AI and agentic systems. The offering covers secure agent development, AI behavior monitoring in production, identity and access management, agent behavior controls, evidence for audits, and generative AI risk management.

Why it matters: Buyers are starting to ask a harder question: “Who is responsible when an agent takes the wrong action?” Cognizant is turning that question into a service line, which means founders and builders should expect enterprise customers to require proof of testing, logging, permissions, and monitoring before buying agent software.

Try/watch: Add an “agent risk packet” to your sales process: what the agent can access, what it can change, how actions are logged, how humans can intervene, and how failures are reviewed.

Sendbird launches an agent designed to own long customer issues

What changed: Sendbird launched Agent Steward on its Delight.ai platform for long-running, multi-step customer cases. It is designed to coordinate across systems, teams, and channels, with sub-agents, cross-channel continuity, and human handoff when judgment is needed.

Why it matters: This is a useful shift for customer experience teams: the agent is not just answering a question; it is meant to be the “owner” of a case from intake to resolution. That matters for businesses where customer problems span logistics, billing, returns, scheduling, or back-office systems.

Try/watch: Pilot this pattern on one painful workflow—damaged shipment, refund exception, missed appointment, failed payment—before using it broadly. Make sure customers can stop, override, or escalate the agent; Sendbird’s own survey says those controls increase trust.

LiveAgent adds named AI agent seats and easier AI-tool connections

What changed: LiveAgent’s May product update says AI Agents will act as virtual agent seats, with AI actions tracked under the AI agent’s name in ticket history, reports, and agent views. It also announced an MCP integration, which lets external AI tools such as Claude Desktop and Cursor access ticket data and perform tasks according to the user’s identity and permissions.

Why it matters: This is especially relevant for small support teams. Naming AI agents and tracking their work makes automation easier to supervise, measure, and explain to staff. The external-tool connection also points to a future where support teams can use their preferred AI tools without manually copying ticket context around.

Try/watch: Before connecting outside AI tools to help-desk data, review role permissions and create a separate AI identity. Start with low-risk tasks like summarizing tickets or drafting replies before allowing transaction changes.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Today's signal

Today's useful thread is safer ways to use agents at work and more useful business automation. These updates point to agents becoming easier to trust, connect, and put into everyday work instead of staying as demos.

The useful updates

Claude Code gets more room to run longer agent sessions

What changed: Anthropic doubled Claude Code’s five-hour usage limits for Pro, Max, Team, and seat-based Enterprise plans, removed peak-hour reductions for Pro and Max, and raised Claude API limits for Opus models after adding SpaceX compute capacity, according to Ars Technica’s report on the announcement.

Why it matters: If you build with coding agents, the practical ceiling just moved up: longer debugging runs, larger refactors, and more parallel experimentation should hit fewer artificial stops. For small teams, that can mean fewer handoffs back to a human just because the agent ran out of quota mid-task.

Try/watch: Revisit any Claude Code workflows you kept short because of limits, but still track weekly usage and cost; more capacity can also make runaway agent loops more expensive.

Cursor adds context usage breakdowns for coding agents

What changed: Cursor 3.3 added a context usage breakdown so users can see how much of an agent’s working memory is being consumed by rules, skills, MCP connections, and subagents.

Why it matters: This is a practical debugging feature for agent builders. When a coding agent behaves poorly, the cause is often not “bad AI” but too much irrelevant context, conflicting rules, or overloaded integrations.

Try/watch: Open a few real agent sessions and look for bloated rules or integrations that are eating context without improving results. Tightening those inputs may be cheaper than switching models.

Collibra launches oversight for production AI agents

What changed: Collibra launched AI Command Center to monitor and control AI systems and agents across their lifecycle, including ownership, behavior, decisions, and risk signals. The company also announced a Giskard partnership for testing and validation, plus agent assessment templates aligned with AI UC-1 standards.

Why it matters: As agents move from drafting answers to taking actions, leaders need a way to know what is deployed, who owns it, what data it uses, and when it drifts. This is especially relevant for regulated companies and for any business letting agents touch customer, financial, or operational systems.

Try/watch: Before scaling agents, create a simple inventory: agent name, owner, connected systems, allowed actions, review process, and failure plan. Tools like this are most useful when the operating discipline already exists.

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