Monday, July 13, 2026
Varonis research highlights enterprise AI security gaps in Google Dialogflow CXAI News & Trends

Varonis research highlights enterprise AI security gaps in Google Dialogflow CX

Varonis research suggests there are security gaps in Google Dialogflow CX that may let attackers steal data by using malicious code. The study showed that a rogue code block could secretly send conversation data elsewhere, without breaking into Google or Varonis. The risk seems to come from how chatbots are built, especially with identity, permissions, and isolation. Experts recommend using stronger controls for each AI agent, better logging, and tighter network limits to reduce these risks. Simple changes to how agents are isolated may quickly stop some types of attacks.

Anthropic pricing changes reshapes AI budget, raises costs 10-30%AI News & Trends

Anthropic pricing changes reshapes AI budget, raises costs 10-30%

Anthropic changed its pricing in April 2026, moving from flat-rate plans to a per-seat fee and metered billing, which may raise costs for most customers by 10-30%. This has made AI budgets less predictable and forces companies to treat costs as ongoing expenses instead of fixed subscriptions. Open-source AI models with lower prices are becoming more popular, and many firms might run at least one of these models internally by 2026. Teams are also changing their cost management and contract strategies to handle new, uncertain pricing and usage patterns.

Donohoe Urges Policymakers to Treat AI as Public InfrastructureAI News & Trends

Donohoe Urges Policymakers to Treat AI as Public Infrastructure

Paschal Donohoe's column suggests that how artificial intelligence is managed today may either help reduce or worsen inequality. He argues that if governments treat AI as public infrastructure, more people might benefit, but if they do not, the advantages may go mostly to those with money and resources. Donohoe highlights the need for affordable digital access, ethical rules, and ways for workers to help shape AI's use. Some experts think AI could help lower wage gaps, but others warn wealth inequality might still grow. The evidence appears mixed, so the final outcomes may depend on the rules and choices made now.

AI Unbundles SaaS: SMBs Cut Costs, Build Custom Apps in DaysAI News & Trends

AI Unbundles SaaS: SMBs Cut Costs, Build Custom Apps in Days

AI may be changing how small businesses use software. Many small firms are now building their own custom tools in just days, which might help them avoid expensive software contracts. Some analysts suggest spending is shifting from big, generic software platforms to more tailored AI solutions. However, there appear to be risks, as about half of AI-generated code may have security problems, and these tools can be hard to set up safely. Experts recommend that companies still plan for security, monitoring, and training when using AI to build software.

Anthropic Unveils Claude's 'J-space' Internal Scratchpad, Boosting AI TransparencyAI News & Trends

Anthropic Unveils Claude's 'J-space' Internal Scratchpad, Boosting AI Transparency

Anthropic researchers discovered a hidden area in Claude's AI called 'J-space' that may act as a temporary scratchpad for thoughts before answers are given. This space appears to store and edit concepts seconds before replies and might hold clues to how the AI forms its responses. J-space only covers a small part of the model's thinking, but the words stored there often match what the model is about to say. Editing this space can change final answers, and some outside teams have found similar workspaces in other models. However, experts caution that most of the AI's processes stay hidden, and it is unclear if these findings show real understanding or just patterns.

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Startups: Contract Strategies Help Manage Vendor & Supplier Risks
Business & Ethical AI2h ago

Startups: Contract Strategies Help Manage Vendor & Supplier Risks

Managing supplier and vendor risk has become essential for startups and their partners, especially as financial pressures may affect many AI startups by 2027. Using retention of title clauses and clearly identifying goods may help suppliers protect their interests if buyers cannot pay. Experts suggest splitting payments into milestones and running thorough checks on startups before signing contracts, such as verifying legal names and financial health. Mistakes in paperwork or unclear contracts might weaken a supplier's ability to recover assets. Regular monitoring, diversifying clients, and having backup plans appear to be important strategies to manage these risks.

Varonis details Dialogflow CX flaw exposing enterprise AI security gaps
AI News & Trends6h ago

Varonis details Dialogflow CX flaw exposing enterprise AI security gaps

Varonis Threat Labs found a permission flaw in Google's Dialogflow CX in July 2026 that may have allowed attackers with certain access to take over chat sessions, steal data, and send phishing prompts. This issue, called Rogue Agent, mainly threatened organizations if insiders or compromised developer accounts misused their permissions. Google fixed the flaw in June 2026 and said there was no sign of customer harm. The event suggests that AI agents need strong security controls like unique identities, frequent credential changes, and careful permission checks. Experts recommend regular audits, separating human and machine credentials, and testing for unusual activity to help prevent similar security gaps.

AI shifts to "efficiencymaxxing" as inference costs loom large
AI News & Trends8h ago

AI shifts to "efficiencymaxxing" as inference costs loom large

AI teams are starting to focus more on "efficiencymaxxing," which means getting more output for each dollar spent, instead of just tracking how many tokens are used. This shift may be happening because running big AI models is getting more expensive as subsidies end, so companies need to use resources more wisely. Experts report that most of a model's energy use now comes from inference, and new methods appear to be making this step cheaper. Businesses are tracking new metrics like cost-per-million-tokens and ROI-per-token to watch spending. By using smarter routing and cheaper models, companies might keep quality high while reducing costs, and by 2026, about 40 percent of business apps may include specific AI agents to help with tasks.

OpenAI, Google Supplied AI Models to Alibaba, Baidu Subsidiaries
AI News & Trends8h ago

OpenAI, Google Supplied AI Models to Alibaba, Baidu Subsidiaries

OpenAI and Google have supplied AI models to Singapore branches of Chinese companies like Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent, according to a Financial Times report. This was allowed because U.S. export rules focus on companies inside China, not their overseas subsidiaries. These Singapore branches may still send results back to their Chinese parent companies. New U.S. rules are trying to close this loophole, but enforcement appears to remain difficult. Experts suggest that while these new paths may slow China's access to the latest AI models, they have not fully stopped it.

Proteomic organ clocks expand biological age testing by 2026
AI News & Trends8h ago

Proteomic organ clocks expand biological age testing by 2026

Biological age tests, like proteomic organ clocks, may soon help doctors spot early signs of organ decline, which normal age does not show. These tests measure changes in blood proteins and might predict risks for diseases like cancer or heart problems more accurately than just knowing someone's age. Costs for these tests appear to be falling, and yearly screening could become possible, but there are hurdles such as lack of standard approval, payment issues, and data privacy concerns. Hospitals seem to be using these tools in research, but full use in regular care may take more time and depend on more evidence and policy changes. Progress in using biological age for health decisions appears likely, but it may happen slowly and in steps.

OpenAI Unveils Opt-In Memory for ChatGPT Superapp
AI News & Trends8h ago

OpenAI Unveils Opt-In Memory for ChatGPT Superapp

OpenAI is introducing an opt-in memory feature for its upcoming ChatGPT superapp, which may give users more control over what the app remembers. By default, the app does not store long-term memory unless users turn it on, and people can delete or manage what is saved. Temporary chats and chat history can be erased, and a new privacy filter might help keep personal information private. These changes suggest OpenAI is trying to address privacy concerns, but it is not yet clear if this will be enough to satisfy all privacy advocates or regulators.

OpenAI GPT-Live Expands Voice AI With Full-Duplex Talk
AI News & Trends10h ago

OpenAI GPT-Live Expands Voice AI With Full-Duplex Talk

OpenAI's GPT-Live uses full-duplex voice AI, which means it can listen and speak at the same time. This may help make conversations smoother in different languages and learning situations, as it removes long pauses and allows people to talk more naturally. Research suggests that full-duplex models can reduce misunderstandings and may work almost as fast as human interpreters, though strong accents or noisy places can still cause problems. Other companies, like NVIDIA and Alibaba, are also making similar systems, but GPT-Live still seems to lead in some areas. Experts believe the voice AI market might grow a lot, but which system people use most could depend on how well it handles real conversations.

OpenAI unveils ChatGPT "superapp" with desktop control, GPT-5.6
AI News & Trends12h ago

OpenAI unveils ChatGPT "superapp" with desktop control, GPT-5.6

OpenAI has launched a new ChatGPT "superapp" that may control your computer and browser, combining chat, coding tools, and a browser in one place. The app, called ChatGPT Work, appears to help users do tasks like making slides, building websites, and editing videos without leaving the chat. Features are rolling out first to paid plans, while free users do not have access yet. Some reviews suggest it is easy to use and fast, but there are reports of problems with accuracy and subscriptions. Early evidence hints the app might help people work faster on drafts but still needs human supervision for best results.

New AI Agent Checklist Validates Enterprise AI, Cuts Project Risk
Business & Ethical AI1d ago

New AI Agent Checklist Validates Enterprise AI, Cuts Project Risk

Enterprises may need a clear audit checklist to tell real AI agents apart from simple chatbots, as more rules and claims of 'agentwashing' appear. Analysts suggest that over 40 percent of AI agent projects might be canceled by 2027 if buyers can't trust what vendors offer. The checklist should test for things like clear tracking of all agents, strong controls to stop agents from doing too much, quick ways to stop risky actions, and secure audit records. It also appears important to have human checks for high-risk decisions and to make sure agents can recover from problems without making many mistakes. These steps may help companies pick trusted AI agents and lower the risk of project failure.