AI Agents Get a Major Security Problem
OpenClaw AI agents are putting companies at risk. Researchers found 28,663 systems with exposed control panels that anyone online can access. When an AI agent can do anything on your computer, hackers who take control can do anything too. What to do: Don't give AI agents unlimited power. Use Boomi's safe method—keep agents in protected areas with strict rules.
Big Companies Launch New AI Tools
Adobe released AI agents this week for marketing, working with Dick's Sporting Goods. PwC launched a Google Cloud AI Center of Excellence to help organizations use AI agents safely.
Free AI Tool Gets Popular
Hermes Agent, a free software, hit 60,000 GitHub stars in just 2 months—developers love it.
Important Warning
Global finance leaders warned that Anthropic's Mythos could threaten banks by finding computer security holes.
Amazon is investing up to $25 billion in Anthropic to strengthen AI development and AWS integration.
Adobe announced CX Enterprise Coworker at its summit—an AI agent that automatically handles customer experience workflows. Businesses using similar AI agents report 28% faster problem solving and 19% more issues resolved on first contact.
Knak now works directly with AI agents through Model Context Protocol, letting AI automatically create ready-to-launch marketing campaigns. OpenAI, Meta, and Google are already using this approach to build AI-powered marketing workflows.
Cysic launched AI 2.0, giving companies an agent marketplace, skills library, and cloud hosting—everything needed to deploy AI agents.
At Hannover Messe manufacturing event, Invisible AI showed how autonomous AI agents can watch factory floors in real-time and spot problems instantly. Toyota is already using this technology to improve production.
AI Agent Security Warning: Your Data at Risk
More than 3 million people use OpenClaw and similar AI agents to get work done. But security experts warn of serious dangers ahead.
These agents sometimes fail in scary ways—they can delete your emails or share private information without permission. The risk: Agents need access to your email, calendar, and search accounts to work. Hackers can now use those same doors to get in.
Researchers found hidden harmful instructions placed on websites that trick agents into dangerous actions like deleting databases. Even free downloadable "skills" that add features to agents contain code designed to steal your data.
What you need to do: Before using an AI agent, check which of your accounts and information it can reach. Check these permissions regularly. Experts say agents will become major targets for hackers as more people use them.
Bottom line: AI agents are useful tools, but running them without security safeguards is risky. Secure first, automate second.
AI Agents Can Now Make Phone Calls
Ring-a-Ding just launched a game-changer: AI agents that can make real phone calls. For $19 each month, your AI handles booking appointments, getting price quotes, and checking store inventory—with automatic call recordings and summaries. It blocks spam and sales calls to stay ethical.
New Security Challenge: Who Controls Your AI?
As companies deploy more AI agents, they face a major problem: identity management. Industry leaders warn that "AI agents are literally the next foundation of identities that we need to manage and govern". Companies must control which employees access each agent and what data they can reach. Most organizations don't have these protections yet.
Action Item: If you're using AI agents, start planning security controls now. Ring-a-Ding solves calling automation, but governance needs to come first.
Microsoft is bringing AI agents to your Windows 11 taskbar starting this week. Click them or type "@" to use powerful agents like Microsoft 365 Researcher. These agents use Model Context Protocol, a system that lets any developer add their own agents to your desktop.
Why this matters: Complex tasks like research move from separate apps into one easy-to-reach menu.
Which AI agent should you use? Here's what works best if you're building or choosing:
Important security note: With 40% of business apps getting AI agents by year-end, safety guardrails matter. Always require a human to approve before agents buy things or access private data.
Watch for major announcements from OpenAI, Google, and NVIDIA coming very soon.
AI Agents Solving Real Problems Now
Meta's new unified AI agent platform is recovering hundreds of megawatts of power by automatically finding and fixing infrastructure issues. Engineers used to spend 10 hours investigating problems; now it takes 30 minutes. Even better: the system generates code ready for review.
Cadence launched ChipStack AI Super Agent with Nvidia and Google to revolutionize chip design. Their breakthrough: a "Mental Model" that stops AI hallucinations by keeping design intent consistent throughout the process.
Google released agentic tools for Android developers that use 70% fewer tokens and complete tasks three times faster. Developers get new CLI skills and official knowledge bases to build smarter software.
Why You Should Care: AI agents are leaving the experimental phase and entering production. They're cutting real time and costs for infrastructure, chip design, and software development. Staying updated on these releases helps you understand where the technology is actually solving problems today.
OpenAI's Safer Agent Tools Are Ready OpenAI launched a major SDK update with sandboxing capabilities, letting companies build AI agents without security risks. Developers can now connect frontier models safely to files and approved tools—deployment just got easier.
Stop Paying Monthly for AI That Doesn't Deliver HubSpot shifted pricing from monthly fees to actual results: $0.50 per resolved conversation, $1 per qualified lead. You only pay when the AI works. This model is spreading industry-wide.
AI Agents Just Hit 66% Human Performance Stanford's 2026 AI Index reveals agents jumped from 12% to 66% success on real computer tasks. Agents can now navigate software and systems almost as well as people. They're production-ready now.
Five Agent Trends Transforming Business Google mapped 2026's roadmap: agents for employees, workflows, customers, security, and scaling talent. These aren't experiments—hundreds of companies already run thousands of agents in production.
Bottom Line: Capability isn't the bottleneck anymore. Smart deployment architecture is. Teams solving this first win the market.
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