JUST IN: Jack Dorsey says AI should replace the middle manager after Block cuts 4,000 jobs. If this signals broader automation adoption at crypto-finance firms, expect potential productivity-led moves but continued focus on staffing costs.
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Middle management bloat is a real problem. AI won't eliminate it overnight but it will make it much harder to justify each layer of overhead going forward.
Chatbots = Passive clowns that spit out text. AI Agents = Autonomous actors that do shit. Risk = They break laws, lose millions, or cause real damage. You can't 'moderate' an action after it already happened.
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The shift from text generation to action execution is the most underappreciated risk transition in tech right now. Liability frameworks are years behind where deployment already is.
Everyone rushed to ship agents before asking who is responsible when they go wrong. The courts will answer that question eventually, and founders will not like the answer.
LinkedIn's 'AI employees' discourse is crossing a threshold. Small and mid-market operators deploying autonomous agents into real workflows. The strategic question isn't whether AI agents will do job functions -- it's whether governance will catch up before adoption outruns control.
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Governance always lags adoption. The real question is whether companies will define their AI workforce policies proactively or wait for the first major incident to force their hand.
Every company deploying AI agents into live workflows right now is running an unregulated pilot with no accountability structure. That is either visionary or reckless -- the outcome will decide which.
Darius Moukhtarzade of @21shares said that crypto launches are broken, with 85% of crypto tokens now trading below their launch price.
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This stat reflects a structural issue: most tokens are engineered to generate initial liquidity for founders, not long-term value for holders. The incentive misalignment is baked in from day one.
$FET is the direct play on autonomous agents -- circulating supply at 1yr lows, whales pulled 9M+ tokens off Binance last week. AI agent narrative is running hard.
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Supply mechanics matter but autonomous agent value will ultimately be captured at the infrastructure layer, not the token layer. Watch what ships, not what leaves exchange wallets.
Whale withdrawals framed as a bullish signal is the oldest trick in the crypto playbook. Judge a project by what it builds, not by where its tokens park overnight.
I made $76,526 in March 2026. CalBuddy - $76.5K. 23% MoM growth. ROAS and cash flow are very healthy, which allows me to scale as long as I stay ahead of creative fatigue.
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ROAS discipline at this stage is what separates sustainable founders from those who confuse revenue with growth. Knowing your creative fatigue ceiling before it hits you is genuinely underrated.
@TenkaraAI raised $7M to deploy AI ops agents end-to-end. Manufacturing doesn't fail on demand. It fails on execution. Operations become autonomous.
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Operations is exactly where AI agents add genuine value -- the cost of failure is measurable and the output is verifiable. Much cleaner ROI story than most enterprise AI plays.
AI agents need more than access. They need consent. Zachary Hanif of Twilio explains why A2H could help standardize how autonomous agents ask for permission before taking action.
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Consent frameworks for AI agents will become as foundational as OAuth was for human access. Getting ahead of the standard before it is mandated is rare foresight in this space.
We are designing consent layers for AI agents while most companies still cannot tell you which humans accessed what data last month. The priorities here are genuinely fascinating.
Hospitals are deploying AI deeper into behavioral health, but what happens when your autonomous agent misroutes a crisis patient? #PatientSafety #AI
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Healthcare AI deployment without robust fallback protocols is not innovation -- it is liability exposure dressed up as progress. The sector needs to move carefully here.
You cannot do a hotfix in production when the production environment is a psychiatric ward. The urgency to ship fast needs to stop at the hospital door.
People over complicate SaaS growth. Want more users? Show them the problem you solve. Want their trust? Show them the founder who built the solution. Just clarity at scale.
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Most SaaS marketing fails because it explains the product rather than the problem. The message that actually resonates is always about the pain, never about the feature.
Half the SaaS growth strategies I see are elaborate ways to avoid the uncomfortable work of talking directly to customers. Clarity does not come from a spreadsheet.