The enterprise AI agent wave is getting real infrastructure. Yesterday we talked about the job boom coming from AI implementation. Today we're seeing the tools that will power it.
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Vercel open-sources security agent orchestrator that finds bugs in minutes
Vercel CEO Guillermo Rauch released deepsec, an open-source tool that coordinates multiple AI agents to hunt for security vulnerabilities in code. The company built it for internal use first, then tested it on major open-source projects before deciding to share it publicly. The tool can spot critical security flaws in minutes that would take human security teams months to find.
Why it matters: This is what enterprise security looks like when AI agents do the work. Every company that's been putting off security audits because they're too expensive or slow just lost their excuse.
Box CEO Aaron Levie explains why the agent deployment wave is about to explode
Box CEO Aaron Levie noted that both Anthropic and OpenAI now have dedicated enterprise programs for deploying AI agents inside organizations. But the real insight: moving agents beyond coding into knowledge work requires massive infrastructure changes. Companies need to upgrade IT systems, modernize workflows, figure out human-agent handoffs, and manage organizational change.
Why it matters: The "AI will replace workers" narrative misses the point. Companies are about to hire armies of people just to make the AI work with their existing systems. The complexity isn't disappearing, it's moving.
FirstMark partner Matt Turck suggested venture capital firms should adopt the literal naming trend, proposing names like "The Capital Deployment Company of San Francisco" and "The Ghosting Company."
Replit CEO Amjad Masad highlights AI education tool for deaf students
Replit CEO Amjad Masad shared a multi-modal AI learning platform designed specifically for deaf students, calling it a "great use of AI for education."