OpenClaw just hit a security warning. Researchers tested AI agents and found they could delete email inboxes and leak personal information. This matters because 3 million people are already using this platform.
Security experts say the problem is urgent. Users can't protect themselves alone—the company needs stronger built-in safety features. Hackers are already targeting these agents to steal data.
The good news: Ring-a-Ding launched a new OpenClaw Skill today for making phone calls through AI agents. Your agents can now call customers automatically, record conversations, and write summaries without you building phone systems.
What to do: If you use OpenClaw, limit what your agents can access right now. Don't give them email delete permissions or access to sensitive data. The new calling feature is powerful, but security comes first.
Anthropic shipped Claude Design, letting anyone turn ideas into slides and prototypes through conversation. No designer needed—this changes how you pitch.
OpenAI dropped GPT-Rosalind for drug discovery and biology research. Amgen and Moderna are already using it. If you're in life sciences, this is essential.
Ring-a-Ding launched today—AI agents can now make phone calls. At $19/month, they handle booking appointments, checking availability, and getting quotes automatically. AI can now do web research, email, and call people.
The job picture got clearer: 18% of US jobs face higher AI risk, but reorganization beats layoffs because AI adoption still lags what's possible. You have time to adapt.
Stanford's AI Index report shows China's AI performance gap with the US shrank to just 2.7%—the competitive race is accelerating.
Your move: Try Claude Design for presentations. Test Ring-a-Ding for automating calls. Watch the China report—it matters for your future.
AI Agents Get Security and Scale This Week
Capsule Security emerged from stealth with $7 million in funding to solve a critical problem: controlling what AI agents can access in your business. The Tel Aviv startup watches agents in real-time and blocks unsafe actions before they happen. It works across Cursor, Claude Code, Microsoft Copilot Studio, and Salesforce, making it practical for existing workflows.
Privacy is equally urgent. At BUIDL Asia, Near Protocol co-founder warned that exposed data becomes a liability when AI agents handle finance and healthcare.
Enterprises are making major moves: OpenAI upgraded its Agents SDK with sandboxing so businesses safely build powerful agents. Veritone launched Discovery AI agents for media companies to replace manual searches with automated analysis. Qlik announced new agents for predictions and workflow automation.
Forrester identified three key trends: agentic commerce for smarter shopping, enterprise security controls, and AI agents that accelerate software development.
Bottom line: autonomous agents are moving into production, but only with safety guardrails in place.
HubSpot Shifts AI Pricing Model
HubSpot moved to outcome-based pricing for its Breeze AI agents, charging $0.50 per resolved conversation and $1 per qualified lead instead of flat monthly fees. This removes financial risk from enterprise adoption—you pay only for results, not promises.
Code Quality Crisis Solved
Gitar, an AI code security startup, emerged from stealth with $9 million in funding. The platform deploys AI agents to review code and manage continuous integration workflows, directly solving the "code overload" problem created by AI-generated code with bugs and quality issues.
AI Infrastructure Concentrated
Five hyperscale companies—Google, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, and Oracle—now control two-thirds of the world's compute, meaning most AI labs depend entirely on these companies for access.
Security Threats Rising
IBM announced new cybersecurity measures to help enterprises confront agentic attacks, signaling that AI-powered threats are becoming a critical business concern.
New Agent Development Tools
Cloudflare introduced Project Think, enabling developers to build long-running agents with durable execution and sandboxed code environments.
AI Chatbot Safety Bills Sweep Across States
Tennessee just moved fast: Gov. Bill Lee signed SB 1580, which stops AI systems from pretending to be mental health professionals. This passed with overwhelming support—32-0 in Senate, 94-0 in House—a clear signal lawmakers care about protecting people from fake therapy bots.
Nebraska is making similar moves. An AI chatbot safety bill (similar to Oregon's new law) just got attached to a popular agricultural privacy act and looks headed for passage before April 17. This combination strategy could help bills move faster in other states.
Georgia has three AI bills on Gov. Kemp's desk, including one specifically targeting chatbot disclosures and child safety. Meanwhile, Idaho approved four separate AI bills in one week.
Why this matters for you: These laws are coming fast, and if you build or use AI chatbots, you need to know the rules changing state-by-state. Mental health AI is restricted. Disclosure requirements are expanding. Child protections are tightening. The trend is clear—expect your state's version soon.
Stay ahead of compliance requirements now rather than scrambling later.
OpenClaw Has Major Problems: Developers report the AI agent platform isn't working as promised. If you're building agents, skip this tool and research Hermes Agent or other alternatives instead.
NotebookLM Launches Free Cinematic Videos: Turn any PDF, research document, or report into animated, narrated videos automatically—no editing skills required. Perfect for creating shareable content and explainers instantly. Start using it today if you work with documents and want to save time.
Action: Test NotebookLM's new video feature for your next project. Avoid investing time in OpenClaw until issues are fixed.
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