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From Capabilities to Responsibilities

The article “From Capabilities to Responsibilities” by Artur Huk argues that in high-stakes AI agent systems—those that can affect finance, healthcare, or critical infrastructure—designing agents around explicit responsibilities rather than just capabilities is essential for governance and safety. It proposes a Responsibility-Oriented Agent (ROA) architecture where strict, code-enforced contracts define what an AI agent is authorized to do, separating intent generation from execution and enabling scalable, deterministic validation that escalates only true exceptions to humans, thus avoiding operational bottlenecks inherent in human-in-the-loop models.

https://www.oreilly.com/radar/from-capabilities-to-responsibilities/

Companies Have a New AI Problem: Too Many Agents

As AI agent adoption grows rapidly in businesses, companies like Lyft, DaVita, and GitLab are facing challenges with “AI agent sprawl,” where too many independently created AI bots complicate cybersecurity, management, and costs. While AI agents improve productivity by automating tasks, firms are now implementing governance and centralized controls to manage proliferation and ensure financial and operational responsibility.

https://www.wsj.com/cio-journal/companies-have-a-new-ai-problem-too-many-agents-9539c4d6

I Don’t Think AI Will Make Your Processes Go Faster

The article argues that AI will not inherently speed up processes, especially in software development, because the main bottleneck is often unclear or incomplete problem definitions rather than execution speed. It emphasizes that improving process throughput requires focusing upstream on providing clear, detailed information and predictable inputs to bottlenecks, rather than simply adding resources or relying on AI-generated solutions.

https://frederickvanbrabant.com/blog/2026-05-15-i-dont-think-ai-will-make-your-processes-go-faster/

Every AI Subscription Is a Ticking Time Bomb for Enterprise

AI providers like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google are currently heavily subsidizing enterprise AI subscriptions, offering services at prices far below their actual operational costs. However, as advanced agentic AI usage rapidly increases computational demands, these companies face unsustainable losses and will soon need to raise prices or shift to usage-based billing models, posing significant financial risks for enterprises that have integrated AI deeply into their workflows without tracking real consumption costs.

https://www.thestateofbrand.com/news/ai-subscription-time-bomb

Bitwarden Scrubs ‘Always Free’ and ‘Inclusion’ Values From Its Website as Longtime Execs Step Down

Bitwarden, a popular open-source password manager, has undergone leadership changes with longtime CEO Michael Crandell moving to an advisory role and CFO Stephen Morrison departing, replaced by executives with private equity and software backgrounds. Concurrently, the company quietly removed the phrase “Always free” from its website’s pricing page, although the free plan remains available; Bitwarden’s chief customer officer stated the company remains committed to offering a robust free plan.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91542655/bitwarden-scrubs-always-free-and-inclusion-values-from-its-website-as-longtime-execs-step-down

Reflections on Science History: a Professor’s Take on AI

Associate Professor of History David Hecht reflects on the parallels between the atomic age and the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), emphasizing that technological advancements are shaped by social, political, and cultural factors rather than occurring inevitably. Hecht highlights the importance of understanding the societal context that fosters technology, warns against relying solely on fear to shape AI policy, and calls for articulating positive visions for regulating AI to ensure beneficial outcomes.

https://bowdoinorient.com/2026/05/16/reflections-on-science-history-a-professors-take-on-ai/

Anthropics/claude-For-Legal: a Suite of Plugins for Legal Workflows

The “claude-for-legal” GitHub repository by Anthropics offers a comprehensive suite of AI-powered plugins, agents, and connectors designed to support a wide range of legal workflows—including commercial, corporate, employment, privacy, litigation, IP, and AI governance. These tools integrate with Claude Cowork or Claude Code and include practice-area-specific skills, scheduled agents, and research connectors, facilitating efficient legal review and drafting while emphasizing that all outputs are drafts requiring attorney review and responsibility.

https://github.com/anthropics/claude-for-legal

How Deepfakes Are Rewriting the Rules of the Modern Workplace

Deepfake technology is increasingly impacting the modern workplace by enabling sophisticated impersonation attacks that exploit trust in familiar voices and faces, leading to significant security risks such as fraudulent payment approvals and misinformation. Organizations must adapt by implementing stricter verification processes, expanding incident response plans to address synthetic media threats, and applying zero-trust principles to communication channels to safeguard against these evolving digital manipulations.

https://www.cio.com/article/4170894/how-deepfakes-are-rewriting-the-rules-of-the-modern-workplace.html

More Money Is Going to Physical Security, but It’s Often CISOs That Oversee It: EY

A recent EY survey reveals that organizations are increasing budgets for physical security, with nearly 80% allocating more funds, sometimes up to 50%, amid rising board oversight. However, many place responsibility for physical security with Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs), blending physical and cybersecurity, which can lead to under-resourcing physical protection; EY recommends centralizing security functions, clarifying accountability, and expanding security preparedness through integrated threat intelligence and realistic crisis simulations.

https://www.facilitiesdive.com/news/more-money-is-going-to-physical-security-but-its-often-cisos-that-overse/820077/

Majority of Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) Consider Paying Cybercriminals to End Ransomware Attacks, According to New Absolute Security Research

A new Absolute Security report reveals that 58% of Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) would consider paying cybercriminals to end ransomware attacks, with operational downtime ranked as the most significant impact. The study also found that ransomware attacks often originate on endpoint devices, recovery times can be extensive—some taking up to two weeks—and many organizations still lack remote recovery capabilities despite widespread availability.

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260512727565/en/Majority-of-Chief-Information-Security-Officers-CISOs-Consider-Paying-Cybercriminals-to-End-Ransomware-Attacks-According-to-New-Absolute-Security-Research

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