Most enterprises already have access to AI models, so that is no longer the differentiator. The real challenge begins after the demo ends. Organizations are now trying to determine how AI agents interact with ERP systems, supply chains, approvals, security policies, customer records, and operational environments that were never designed for autonomous systems. The reality is that ERP remains the system of record for many business decisions. If AI agents cannot operate within ERP governance, approval, and transaction frameworks, they remain assistants rather than operational participants.
What makes this interesting is that Snowflake is not positioning itself as another AI platform vendor. The company is positioning itself to be the governance and orchestration layer that enterprises will build agentic AI around. Horizon Context, Semantic Studio, Cortex Sense, Coco, Cowork, Apache Iceberg interoperability, Model Context Protocol (MCP) connectivity, and the company’s broader AI security
Crossmint launched a Visa powered API that lets developers enable AI agents to make card payments with tokenized credentials.
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DeFi APIs sit underneath every wallet, dashboard, and trading bot in on-chain finance. They feed the prices users see and the positions wallets track. They also drive the routing logic behind swap aggregators. AI agents executing trades in 2026 rely on the same data layer.
Anthropic is expanding Project Glasswing, its security vulnerability program, and access to Mythos to 150 organizations across 15 countries — targeting critical infrastructure in power, water, healthcare, and communications where a cyberattack could affect 100 million people.
Our 2026 State of AI for Business Report surveyed more than 2,100 business professionals — 86% of whom are B2B marketers — and asked what AI training they want most.
Workday is aiming to help customers to develop and deploy agentic systems without compromising corporate security or compliance, unveiling a series of AI tools at its DevCon event this week.
Chief among them is Agent Passport, which validates an agent’s safety and compliance both before it is deployed, and continuously during its operation. When an agent attempts a task, Agent Passport can allow, block, or route the action appropriately, and problem agents can be stopped or restricted, based on company policy.
Agents will be vetted for a series of risks, including prompt injection, jailbreak and goal hijacking, system prompt extraction, leaks of employee data, and unsafe outputs. Those tests will be tied to public standards such as Mitre ATLAS, and will be performed by security partners, not by Workday. Security teams can view those attestations, receiving a signed, auditable record of who tested the agent, and what it was tested for.
Because every check is tied to a public standard, s
The integration of real-time compliance screening in AI transactions enhances security, fostering broader enterprise adoption of autonomous commerce.
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BREMEN, Germany, June 1, 2026 — Synera today announced it is one of the first companies in the design and simulation space to work with NVIDIA NemoClaw, blueprint for building specialized […]
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IBM has launched a tool designed to help customers assess cloud-sovereignty risks and meet regulatory compliance requirements.
The Sovereignty Risk Profile launch comes as digital sovereignty becomes a higher priority for organizations concerned about where data is stored and processed. According to an IBM survey, 93% of executives believe sovereignty needs to be part of their business strategy.
Via the new tool, customers can set up policies related to regulatory and business requirements — such as where data resides and how it’s protected, for instance. These policies can be applied to specific cloud workloads, regions, or zones in the Sovereignty Risk Profile tool, allowing users to track sovereignty requirements “in real time,” IBM Cloud product manager Janet Van said in a blog post, with “visibility into configurations, encryption posture, and environmental controls.”
It’s then possible to assess compliance and decide what workloads meet sovereignty requirements.
Tracking the