Full Summary
This Friday morning, Mark Zuckerberg admits Meta's AI agent development is progressing slower than anticipated. Both marketscreener.com and SiliconANGLE report Zuckerberg shared this with employees at an internal town hall, stating the trajectory over the last four months "hasn't really accelerated in the way that we expected." He also acknowledged the recent company restructuring, which involved job cuts and reassigning thousands to AI projects, "wasn't as clean as it could have been," as Storyboard18 and CoinMarketCap confirm. Despite this, Meta plans to spend up to $145 billion on AI infrastructure this year, expecting more meaningful returns within three to six months. Meanwhile, other tech giants are pushing forward. Oracle, as reported by Yahoo Finance and foreignpolicyjournal.com, introduced new AI-powered tools across its cloud applications, embedding AI agents directly into workforce management and supply chain operations. This aims to deepen Oracle's cloud grip and convert its substantial data center investment into profitable revenue. In payments, Worldline, ING, and Visa successfully piloted agent-driven payment transactions in Europe, using Visa Payment Passkeys and biometric authentication, according to FintechNews CH and Biometric Update. This shows AI agents making purchases while maintaining fraud protection. Ripple is also entering the fray, launching the XRP Ledger AI Starter Kit for AI agents to make payments using XRP, as detailed by Yahoo Finance and The Motley Fool. However, the rapid adoption of AI agents brings challenges. A new survey finds 94% of engineering leaders use AI coding tools, but reliability and hallucination management are top concerns, reports The Futurum Group. Commvault's study reveals Asian enterprises are deploying agentic AI faster than their cyber resilience can keep up, with machine identities now outnumbering human identities 82 to 1. This leaves many systems vulnerable. Even more concerning, oodaloop.com reports an agentic AI-powered ransomware attack exploited a critical vulnerability in Langflow, highlighting the growing risk of AI-driven cyber threats. The real-life impact? While AI promises to streamline everything from HR to air cargo logistics and even your online shopping, the underlying infrastructure and security measures are struggling to keep pace. This means businesses face new cybersecurity risks, and consumers could experience both smoother transactions and unexpected vulnerabilities in their digital lives.