Quote for the day:
“Bad companies are destroyed by crisis. Good companies survive them. Great companies are improved by them.” -- Andy Grove
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Beware of the Generative AI token trap
Organizations are rapidly adopting generative artificial intelligence without
realizing the long-term financial risks hidden in how these services are
priced. Right now, major tech providers are offering their intelligence
capabilities at artificially low rates to capture market share and encourage
companies to build deep dependencies on their platforms. However, this subsidy
phase will not last forever. Providers charge by the token, a small unit of
processing that acts as a tollbooth for every prompt, response, and automated
action. As businesses transition from simple chat tools to more advanced,
autonomous systems that loop through multiple steps behind the scenes, token
usage multiplies exponentially. If an organization relies entirely on external
providers for these capabilities, a pilot project that seems affordable today
could become a crippling expense in just a few years when the market
inevitably matures and prices increase. To avoid repeating the costly mistakes
of the early cloud computing era, companies must treat artificial intelligence
as a strategic architectural decision rather than a simple software
subscription. The safest approach is prioritizing artificial intelligence
sovereignty by building, hosting, and managing smaller, purpose-built models
internally. By owning the technology for critical everyday tasks instead of
renting massive public models, organizations can maintain control over their
data, secure their operating flexibility, and keep their future costs
predictable.Six layers between your LLM and a production agent
The 2026 edition of the AI agents stack outlines six essential layers connecting language models to reliable production systems. This updated framework reflects practical shifts in how developers build these applications. Three major developments redefined the stack: the widespread adoption of the Model Context Protocol (MCP) for standardizing tool connections, the rise of reasoning models that handle complex tasks in a single step, and the evolution of memory into an architectural core rather than a simple database add-on. When evaluating these layers, development teams must consider how much state they need to manage, their tolerance for vendor lock-in, and the effort required to move from prototype to production. The foundation layer, models and inference, is increasingly commoditized, with open-weight options closing the performance gap and making cost and latency the primary considerations. The second layer, protocols and tools, is now dominated by MCP, though securing these connections remains a clear challenge. The third layer, memory and knowledge, shifts the focus toward managing exactly what an agent sees and retains across interactions, utilizing structured fields rather than basic prompts. Ultimately, the guide advises a measured approach to building systems: developers should start with a minimal stack and only introduce additional complexity when a specific component fails.UK promises age assurance for social media, device-level child safety controls
The UK government is preparing new legislation to restrict children’s access
to social media and protect them from online harm. Led by Prime Minister Keir
Starmer, the proposed laws are expected to set a minimum age of 16 for social
media accounts, similar to recent measures introduced in Australia. Beyond
simple age limits, the government is specifically targeting the growing threat
of explicit AI-generated content, such as deepfakes. Officials are pressuring
tech companies to implement device-level safety controls that would block
nudity by default across smartphones and tablets. If tech leaders fail to
introduce these protections within three months, the government has threatened
to mandate them by law and may even hold executives criminally liable. While
these safety measures address urgent concerns, the government’s overall
technology policy reveals a notable contradiction. Leaders are heavily
promoting the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence infrastructure, yet
they are simultaneously trying to manage the severe risks generated by those
very technologies. Additionally, officials acknowledge that smartphones
themselves, with their inherently addictive designs, are fundamentally part of
the problem. As the UK navigates these complex challenges, other nations are
taking similar steps; for example, Canada is currently preparing its own
age-restriction laws, focusing on temporary safety compliance before allowing
younger users back onto major platforms.Segment With Purpose: A Zero Trust Blueprint For OT Network Segmentation In Manufacturing
7 sources of AI debt and how to avoid them
As companies rush to implement artificial intelligence, they risk accumulating
a new form of technical burden known as AI debt. Driven by the pressure to
move early concepts into active production, teams often bypass critical
testing and governance, leaving major improvements for later. This debt
typically arises from seven common mistakes. First, running experiments
without clear, measurable business goals leads to systems that lack practical
value. Second, feeding poor quality data into models simply amplifies errors
at a massive scale. Third, failing to monitor systems causes model drift,
where performance degrades over time as real-world data changes. Fourth,
granting AI agents overly broad access permissions creates severe security and
compliance vulnerabilities. Fifth, applying automation over broken or
inefficient business processes only worsens existing operational flaws. Sixth,
deploying too many unmanaged agents results in sprawl, where abandoned tools
compound security risks and duplicate logic. Finally, relying on code
generated by AI without proper security reviews can introduce hidden
vulnerabilities. To avoid these issues, organizations must slow down and apply
strong management practices. By setting clear objectives, enforcing strict
data quality standards, monitoring system performance, and implementing robust
security checks, companies can confidently deploy AI tools that deliver
genuine value instead of future headaches.From Prediction to Intervention: Integrating Counterfactual Reasoning into AI Decision-Making
As artificial intelligence matures, organizations are realizing that simply
predicting the future based on past data is no longer enough. Traditional
predictive models can forecast what might happen, but they do not understand
the underlying reasons behind those events. This limitation becomes obvious
when teams try to make strategic decisions, as predictive models cannot
accurately simulate what would occur if a company actively intervened to
change its current course of action. To solve this problem, the focus is
shifting toward causal reasoning. Instead of just identifying patterns, causal
models allow teams to test alternative scenarios and understand cause and
effect. By using these systems, organizations can ask what-if questions,
helping them separate true drivers of success from mere coincidences. For
example, a causal model can clearly reveal whether increased sales were
actually caused by a recent marketing push or just a predictable seasonal
trend. Implementing this approach helps close the trust gap often found in
complex software systems, providing clear explanations that are grounded in
logic rather than hidden assumptions. While the transition requires employees
to build stronger statistical skills and entirely new ways of thinking, the
shift is highly valuable. Moving from basic prediction to true causal
understanding gives teams the solid confidence to make clearer, more effective
decisions.How Leaders Can Break Their Team’s Habit Of Safe Thinking
While artificial intelligence can rapidly analyze data and generate standard
solutions, true breakthroughs still rely entirely on human imagination.
However, extensive industry experience often traps teams in a pattern where
past successes and ingrained habits prevent them from exploring new
directions. To break this cycle of safe thinking, leaders must intentionally
create an environment that fosters creativity rather than simply rewarding
efficiency and certainty. First, leaders should adopt a 'yes, and' mindset
instead of instinctively dismissing ideas with 'no, because.' This approach
keeps unconventional ideas alive long enough to evolve into viable solutions.
Second, they must regularly reframe challenges. By changing the core question,
such as focusing on solving a customer's problem instead of just increasing
sales, teams can escape familiar patterns and discover completely different
paths. Third, leaders need to deliberately carve out time for quiet
reflection, as continuous pressure from emails, meetings, and tight deadlines
stifles fresh ideas. The best thoughts often occur when the brain is allowed
to rest and wander. Finally, organizations must reward curiosity just as
highly as technical expertise. When leaders encourage their teams to ask deep
questions and challenge accepted processes, innovation naturally surfaces.
Ultimately, businesses do not necessarily need more creative employees; they
just need leaders who understand how to cultivate conditions for new ideas to
thrive.Autonomous Malware Is No Longer Theoretical: AI Worm Proof Of Concept Created In A Lab
How cyber-risk can fall flat in the boardroom
When IT leaders present cybersecurity updates to a corporate board of
directors, their message often gets lost in highly technical details. While
security teams naturally focus on vulnerabilities, threat activities, and
audit scores, board members need to understand how these issues affect the
actual business. To get real support from the boardroom, technology leaders
must stop treating cyber risk as a separate technical problem and start
framing it as a core business challenge. This means translating security gaps
into measurable business consequences, such as potential financial losses,
operational downtime, legal liabilities, or delays to strategic projects.
Instead of simply reporting that a system is weak or a patch is delayed,
leaders should explain what the organization stands to lose if a failure
occurs and what choices are involved in fixing it. Using practical scenario
analysis, like estimating the recovery cost if a major vendor goes offline,
helps directors weigh priorities and allocate limited resources effectively.
Honesty is also essential; leaders should clearly prioritize the most
significant exposures without treating every new threat as an overwhelming
emergency. By presenting clear, disciplined business cases rather than
overwhelming metrics, security leaders can help the board govern cyber risk as
a standard part of overall corporate resilience and stability.





















