This week, data privacy concerns took center stage as companies worldwide expand their use of AI agents. A Cloudera study found that 53% of organizations see data privacy as the biggest hurdle to adopting AI tools that can think and act on their own. Many fear these systems might mishandle sensitive information. Despite these worries, 96% of businesses plan to use more AI agents in the next year, focusing on tasks like spotting cyber threats and fixing tech problems.

Security companies are racing to build safer AI tools. Vectra AI announced new AI Analyst software that helps detect hackers faster by working with CrowdStrike’s security tools. Experts say trust-building steps like clear data rules and safety limits are key to making AI agents reliable.

Business leaders want AI agents to have stronger security features and learn quicker. Nearly 40% find it hard to connect AI tools to their old computer systems. As AI does more jobs alone, companies must prove these systems won’t leak private data.

Extended Coverage
From news to worker

Do not just read about agents. Build one that runs.

Create an agent from a short prompt, connect a gateway later, and pay mainly for active runtime.

No setup work4 gatewaysClone winnersState saved

Hosted agent

OpenClaw or Hermes

saved state
Browser
WhatsApp
Telegram
Slack
Generate setup files, upload prepared files, or launch from a marketplace kit. Stop, resume, clone, and rollback without losing memory.
Run an OpenClaw or Hermes agent without a server.
Open Agent Factory