Coding Weekly AI News
November 10 - November 18, 2025This Week's Big Coding News: AI Agents Write Better Code
AI Agents Are Writing Code Themselves Now
The biggest news this week is that AI agents are learning to write code to solve problems instead of trying to do the work by themselves. This idea comes from a company called Anthropic. Instead of asking an AI to complete a task directly, they ask the AI to write code that does the task, and then the code runs on its own. This approach is way smarter than people thought. When researchers tested it, they used 98.7% fewer computing tokens, which means it costs much less money and runs much faster. Before this change, the same task needed 150,000 tokens to do. Now it only needs 2,000 tokens. That is a huge difference!
Companies Building Places for Code to Run Safely
Because AI agents write code, they need safe places to run that code. Think of a sandbox like the ones kids play in - it keeps sand in one place and does not mess up everything around it. Companies like Langchain and Anthropic are now building special sandbox areas where AI agents can write and test code without breaking anything. This is important because if code runs in the wrong place, it could hurt computers or systems. With sandboxes, the AI code stays safe and cannot cause problems.
Coding Tools Getting Bigger and Smarter
Coding helper tools are becoming super popular right now. Claude, an AI made by Anthropic, is winning first place on leaderboards for coding tasks. This shows Claude is the best at writing code compared to other AI systems. Another tool called Lovable just reached 8 million people using it every month, which is wild because it only had 2.3 million users back in July. That is a 3.5 times increase in just a few months! Meanwhile, Cursor, another popular tool that helps engineers write code, just raised $2.3 billion in funding and is now worth $29.3 billion. Even China is making affordable coding agents now, with ByteDance creating one that costs much less.
Security Problems Are Scaring Experts
However, security researchers discovered some serious dangers in popular AI tools this week. They found critical bugs in Meta, Nvidia, and Microsoft's AI systems that could let hackers break in and control computers. The bugs come from something called ZeroMQ and Python pickle deserialization that people forgot was dangerous. Researchers say companies are moving so fast they copy code from each other without checking if it is safe. On top of that, hackers can break into Cursor's new web browser using JavaScript code injection techniques. This is like someone finding a secret back door to your house. These security problems show that even popular, expensive tools have holes that bad people can use.
AI Does Not Save Time As Much As People Think
Here is something surprising: AI coding assistants do not actually save engineers that much time, even though they help write more code. A reporter from The Register tested this and found that while the tools are helpful, they are not the giant time-savers that companies advertise. The tools help engineers work better and write code faster, but engineers still need to check the code and make sure it works right. This means people still need to do important thinking work.
Companies Want to Hire More Engineers, Not Fewer
Another important finding came from GitLab, which asked 3,266 tech workers about AI coding. The study shows that AI is helping teams create code faster, but companies actually need to hire more skilled engineers, not fewer. This is different from what some people worried about. Instead of AI replacing engineers, it is making teams stronger and creating more work. Engineers using AI tools can do bigger projects and solve harder problems, which means companies need even more smart people to work with them.