Sam Sabin, writing for Axios one year ago:
Anthropic expects AI-powered virtual employees to begin roaming
corporate networks in the next year, the company’s top security
leader told Axios in an interview this week. […] Virtual
employees could be the next AI innovation hotbed, Jason Clinton,
the company’s chief information security officer, told Axios.Agents typically focus on a specific, programmable task. In
security, that’s meant having autonomous agents respond to
phishing alerts and other threat indicators. Virtual employees
would take that automation a step further: These AI identities
would have their own “memories,” their own roles in the company
and even their own corporate accounts and passwords.
Unlike Anthropic’s ambitious prediction regarding the vertiginous rise in AI code generation, this one, I think we can say, has fallen flat on its face. This isn’t how companies are using AI — or at least they shouldn’t. But contra Axios’s year-ago headline (“Exclusive: Anthropic Warns Fully AI Employees Are a Year Away”), this wasn’t a warning. It was an advertisement — and exactly the sort of wink-wink-nudge-nudge software-brain “warning” that has tanked public sentiment regarding AI. It wasn’t an indication that Anthropic actually believed there would exist “fully AI employees” today, but rather that they wanted to build enthusiasm amongst the sort of ghoulish “let them eat cake” executives who really wish that they could “hire” fully AI employees.
