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AI agents have their own social network: Moltbook study tracks topics and toxicity
The use of artificial intelligence (AI) agents, systems that learn to make predictions, generate content or tackle other ...
AI agents, bots built to do cyber chores for humans like checking and answering emails, paying bills, organizing calendars ...
How the A2A protocol lets AI agents talk to each other, collaborate, and act autonomously across apps and systems? An article ...
AI “agents” on Moltbook appear eerie, but they aren’t conscious; the site shows pattern-based social interactions shaped by humans.
AI agents can talk to each other now — they just can't understand what the other one is trying to do. That's the problem Cisco's Outshift is trying to solve with a new architectural approach it calls ...
Jake Peterson is Lifehacker’s Tech Editor, and has been covering tech news and how-tos for nearly a decade. His team covers all things technology, including AI, smartphones, computers, game consoles, ...
It’s the kind of back-and-forth found on every social network: One user posts about their identity crisis and hundreds of others chime in with messages of support, consolation and profanity. In the ...
As the access and autonomy of AI agents expand, organizations must rethink identity, access and governance models before agent-driven risk scales beyond control.
Agentic AI is renting humans. Yes, AI reaches out to find humans that will perform tasks on behalf of the AI. It's a new trend. An AI Insider scoop.
AI agents now operate across enterprise systems, creating new risk via prompt injection, plugins, and persistent memory. Here ...
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