Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Google's AI Mode Exceeds 1 Billion Users, Reshaping SearchAI News & Trends

Google's AI Mode Exceeds 1 Billion Users, Reshaping Search

Google's new AI Mode in Search may be changing how people use the internet, with over 1 billion monthly users since its launch. Instead of just showing links, AI Mode gives chat-like answers and suggests follow-up questions, though users can still use the regular web tab. Reports suggest that most users now get their answers without clicking on outside links, which may be causing less traffic to other websites. There is some concern that this could hurt publishers and change how sites try to appear in search results. While competitors are trying similar things, none seem to have as many users as Google's AI Mode.

Enterprises adopt new models to govern always-on AI agentsBusiness & Ethical AI

Enterprises adopt new models to govern always-on AI agents

Enterprises are increasingly using always-on AI agents for tasks like emails and finance, which may raise new security and control questions. Treating each agent like an employee - with unique credentials and clear ownership - appears to be a key step for safety and traceability. Organizations might set rules so that low-risk tasks happen automatically, but actions with more risk require human approval. Reports suggest that strong logging, runtime checks, and clear data rules are needed to meet legal and compliance demands. By 2026, about 40% of enterprise apps may use these agents, so companies seem to be moving toward structured, layered oversight instead of ad hoc solutions.

OpenAI Launches DeployCo: $4 Billion Unit Embeds AI Engineers for EnterprisesAI News & Trends

OpenAI Launches DeployCo: $4 Billion Unit Embeds AI Engineers for Enterprises

OpenAI has announced DeployCo, a new company with over $4 billion in funding, to help businesses use AI by embedding its engineers directly into client companies. These engineers, called forward-deployed engineers (FDEs), work closely inside businesses to set up and support AI systems, which may make it harder for clients to switch to other vendors later. Reports suggest this setup helps companies solve problems faster and may lead to higher customer retention, but large-scale results are not yet published. DeployCo will start with about 150 FDEs from OpenAI's acquisition of Tomoro, and investors may gain special data rights as part of these partnerships. The shift to these deep deployment partnerships may indicate that businesses now value real results from AI over just test scores.

Palo Alto Networks tests Claude Mythos for vulnerability detection, finds 26 CVEsAI News & Trends

Palo Alto Networks tests Claude Mythos for vulnerability detection, finds 26 CVEs

Palo Alto Networks tested the Claude Mythos AI tool for finding software vulnerabilities and found 26 possible issues, though none appear to have been exploited. The results suggest that while AI can quickly surface meaningful security problems, each discovery still needs human review and might add extra costs. Real-world buyers may face high expenses once free usage credits run out. There may also be risks if the tools are not properly managed, like leaking sensitive code. Organizations might benefit from these tools if they have large, complex systems, but smaller teams may find traditional methods work well enough at a lower cost.

Google: AI shrinks cyberattack cost, boosts volume in 2026AI News & Trends

Google: AI shrinks cyberattack cost, boosts volume in 2026

Google's report suggests AI is making cyberattacks cheaper and more frequent. Attackers may now use AI to quickly find security flaws, create convincing phishing emails, and adjust malware to avoid detection. Early cases show AI can help hackers work much faster than before, though defenders are starting to use AI tools too. Experts warn that organizations who delay updating their defenses might struggle against these fast, automated attacks. The report says the best defense may be combining AI detection with human oversight and strong security practices.

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Nestlé cuts 18 underperforming brands, eyes full portfolio reshape by 2026
Institutional Intelligence & Tribal Knowledge3h ago

Nestlé cuts 18 underperforming brands, eyes full portfolio reshape by 2026

Nestlé is reviewing its product lines and may cut 18 underperforming brands, which make up about 20% of its sales but are not growing much. The company wants to focus more on four main areas: Coffee, Petcare, Nutrition, and Food & Snacks, while it might sell or leave other businesses like ice cream and packaged water. Nestlé suggests these changes may help put more money and effort into its stronger brands and make its business simpler. Some businesses, like vitamins and baby food, may also be sold or restructured. Analysts think 2026 could be an important year for Nestlé as it decides how to reshape its group of brands.

Enterprises Adopt Governance, Budget Controls for LLM Costs, Data Risks
Business & Ethical AI3h ago

Enterprises Adopt Governance, Budget Controls for LLM Costs, Data Risks

Enterprises using large language models may face risks of high costs and data exposure. Experts suggest that having clear rules and real-time controls, such as tracking usage and setting spending limits, can help manage these risks. Many companies follow official guidelines like NIST AI RMF and the EU AI Act to build strong programs. Regularly checking and updating policies, as well as working across different teams, appears to make these programs more resilient as rules and needs change.

Enterprise AI Adoption Reaches 88% in 2026, Reshaping Workflows
Business & Ethical AI3h ago

Enterprise AI Adoption Reaches 88% in 2026, Reshaping Workflows

By 2026, surveys suggest that 88 percent of organizations may use AI in at least one business function, and adoption appears to be rising quickly, especially in large firms and financial services. Many companies report seeing better productivity and lower costs, but most are still experimenting with how AI fits their work. Privacy and data protection are highlighted as important, with advice to limit data collection and keep humans involved in big decisions. New rules, like the EU AI Act, may soon require firms to manage risks and document how AI systems are used, especially in areas that affect job decisions. Overall, AI is becoming more common, but full automation does not seem to be happening yet for most teams.

NVIDIA Unveils RTX Spark AI PCs With 1 Petaflop Power
AI News & Trends3h ago

NVIDIA Unveils RTX Spark AI PCs With 1 Petaflop Power

NVIDIA has introduced a new type of AI PC called RTX Spark, which may reach up to 1 petaflop of computing power in devices the size of a typical gaming laptop. These systems combine a Grace CPU with a Blackwell GPU and can support up to 128 GB of unified memory, which might allow users to run much larger AI models on their own device. RTX Spark comes with special security features like session isolation and strict permission controls through the NVIDIA OpenShell software. Release dates are still vague, but NVIDIA says these PCs will be available in the fall, with details about pricing and full performance still to come.

Open-weight models integrate agentic features, challenge proprietary AI in 2026
AI News & Trends3h ago

Open-weight models integrate agentic features, challenge proprietary AI in 2026

Open-weight AI models are adding more advanced features like long-context processing, tool use, and handling different data types, and they may be catching up to proprietary AI models. Early results, such as those from MiniMax M3, suggest that open models are becoming better at real tasks, especially coding. Many companies seem to prefer open models because they can control, customize, and manage costs more easily. However, most companies are still only partly using agentic AI in their daily work, with strong rules and monitoring needed before bigger rollouts. Experts suggest that the main competition now may be about control, reliability, and cost, not just accuracy.

Claire's Six-Part Framework Improves AI Agent Goal Setting
AI Deep Dives & Tutorials5h ago

Claire's Six-Part Framework Improves AI Agent Goal Setting

Claire's six-part framework may help AI agents set better goals by making them clear, testable, and limited by rules. The framework suggests agents start with an explicit goal, check their work as they go, and stop or get help when needed. Early user reports suggest this approach may lead to more reliable fixes and fewer mistakes, but it does not remove all risks. Experts believe using the six-part structure first, then picking the right tools, makes it easier to adapt to new systems later. The framework appears to help trace, test, and improve agent actions, though results can vary between different setups.

Hershey invests $250M to accelerate supply chain automation by 2026
AI News & Trends7h ago

Hershey invests $250M to accelerate supply chain automation by 2026

Hershey plans to invest $250 million by 2026 to make its supply chain more automated and digitally connected. The company expects this may save about $300 million a year, with a large part coming from better supply chain productivity. Hershey's approach suggests other companies should first standardize processes, then connect real-time data, and only later expand automation. The roadmap points to using key technology systems and careful pilot projects. Some surveys warn that digital projects might fail if workers lack the right skills, so training and upskilling appear important for success.

PitchBook: Agentic AI Shifts SaaS to ERP-like Infrastructure
AI News & Trends19h ago

PitchBook: Agentic AI Shifts SaaS to ERP-like Infrastructure

PitchBook reports that agentic AI may shift from SaaS to more ERP-like infrastructure, meaning AI agents could become deeply embedded in company workflows. This might change how software companies are valued, with a focus on integration and long-term use instead of short-term revenue. Surveys suggest more companies plan to use AI agents soon, but widespread adoption may be slowed by governance and technical issues. Investors and companies appear to be tracking new metrics, such as task resolution rates and integration speed, instead of just revenue. PitchBook also notes that sales processes may become longer and more complex, but long-term value could increase if AI platforms become core to business operations.

Every updates AI engineering guide to 8 steps, adds plugin
AI News & Trends21h ago

Every updates AI engineering guide to 8 steps, adds plugin

Every has updated its AI engineering guide from 4 to 8 steps, reflecting how AI may handle more execution tasks while humans focus on planning and review. The new guide comes with a plugin that reportedly includes 43 subagents and 38 skills, which link to different workflow phases. The update introduces a "sandwich" model, where people set the direction and finish tasks, and AI manages the middle steps. This change might help teams work faster and remember lessons better, but still lets teams adjust the process as needed.

OpenHuman unveils desktop AI with 1 billion token local memory
AI News & Trends21h ago

OpenHuman unveils desktop AI with 1 billion token local memory

OpenHuman is a new desktop AI app that may store up to 1 billion tokens of personal data, but this number has not been independently checked. The app keeps all information, like emails and notes, on the user's device and supports over 118 service connections. Early reviews suggest OpenHuman is private, easy to use, and powerful, but public feedback is still limited and mostly positive. Experts say storing data locally might lower costs and give users more control, but OpenHuman has yet to prove its reliability and scale through outside tests. The wide range of integrations appears to set it apart from other similar tools.