Reuters.com reported that the proposed Executive Order “… would task Attorney General Pam Bondi with establishing an “AI Litigation Task Force whose sole responsibility shall be to challenge state AI laws, including on grounds that such laws unconstitutionally regulate interstate commerce, are preempted by existing federal regulations, or are otherwise

Continue Reading Are you ready for a federal Executive Order to supersede state AI laws?

Computerworld.com reported that “Failed implementations of AI technologies are pushing CIOs to step back and try to better understand the technology and its impact before moving ahead, according to analysts and industry experts.” The November 18, 2025 article entitled ” Doomed enterprise AI projects usually lack vision” (https://www.computerworld.com/article/4091967/doomed-enterprise-ai-projects-usually-lack-vision.html)

Continue Reading CIOs need to better understand AI after many failed AI projects!

DarkReading.com reported that “AI search tools like Perplexity, ChatGPT, and OpenAI’s Atlas browser offer powerful capabilities for research and information gathering but are also dangerously susceptible to low-effort content manipulation attacks. It turns out websites that can detect when an AI crawler visits can serve completely different content than what

Continue Reading AI crawlers are easy to fool!

Computerworld.com reported that “Mirroring AI in general, the newest OpenAI service has the potential to deliver massive productivity gains. But the potential for errors and data leakage are equally great. OpenAI on Thursday rolled out its latest offering, a comprehensive data collection and analysis capability called “company knowledge”. And although

Continue Reading Watch out OpenAI wants all of your internal data!

Computerworld.com reported that “The genAI browser from the company that created ChatGPT brings with it security concerns that could hinder widespread corporate adoption.”  The October 24, 2024 article entitled “Enterprises should not install OpenAI’s new Atlas browser, analysts warn” (https://www.computerworld.com/article/4078115/enterprises-should-not-install-openais-new-atlas-browser-analysts-warn.html) included these comments:

Atlas can help automate online browsing based on user preferences. The browser has ChatGPT as its landing page, where the technology can take control of the browser to run web-based tasks.

If a user is viewing a recipe and wants to make it, for example, the browser will automatically go to sites like Instacart and place an order for the ingredients. Or the agent chatbot — which sits in a side panel — can make changes to documents in Google Docs based on user requests. (Google Docs already has a prompting feature to automate document changes.)

Critics were quick to point out that Atlas is vulnerable to prompt hijacking, where malicious prompts embedded in webpages could lead to data theft.

What do you think?

First published at https://www.vogelitlaw.com/blog/think-twice-before-installing-openais-new-atlas-browser
Continue Reading Think twice before installing OpenAI’s new Atlas browser!Think twice before installing OpenAI’s new Atlas browser!

Computerworld.com reported that “Microsoft’s Copilot will soon be able to work autonomously on local files in Windows, with Copilot Actions, an “experimental” feature that can perform tasks such as sending emails, updating documents and organizing files on its own.”  The October 16, 2025 article entitled “The newest Windows Copilot agent

Continue Reading Do you want Windows Copilot to send emails for you?

DarkReading.com reported that “Agentic AI deployments are becoming an imperative for organizations of all sizes looking to boost productivity and streamline processes, especially as major platforms like Microsoft and Salesforce build agents into their offerings. In the rush to deploy and use these helpers, it’s important that businesses understand that

Continue Reading You need to take responsibility for security when using AI Agents!