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At RSAC, agentic risks and security were front of mind for IT pros.

Thursday time! A same-day delivery network built to high standards—that’s the core of OneRail’s partnership with FedEx, which now provides two-hour and end-of-day service.

In today’s edition:

Agents, agents, agents!

Code breakdown

Twin takeover

—Brianna Monsanto, Caroline Nihill

CYBERSECURITY

A robot Customer Service AI Assistant typing on laptop

Illustration: Brittany Holloway-Brown, Photo: Top Stock/Adobe Stock

Like Glinda the Good with the people of the Land of Oz, agentic security was more popular than ever at RSAC 2026.

During the annual conference, which took place at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, current and emerging AI and agentic security risks dominated the conversation as security professionals did their best to wrap their heads around cybercriminals using the technology for their latest schemes.

Not-so-subtle foreshadowing. An underlying theme of the conference this year: the worst is yet to come.

Security professionals spent a great deal of time forecasting threats. During a March 24 Illumio panel at San Francisco’s Hyatt Regency, for example, Microsoft GM of Global Threat Intelligence Sherrod DeGrippo predicted a new type of threat actor that could soon pose a risk to organizations.

“We will see the advent very soon of the ‘unicorn threat actor,’ which is an apex-level threat actor that has incredible capability, incredible reach, incredible automation, and persistence,” DeGrippo said, adding that these will be socially motivated entities who engage in acts of hacktivism.

Conference time.BM

Presented By JumpCloud

SOFTWARE

A magnifying glass revealing the code behind an AI brain

Getty Images

Should companies slow their adoption of code-generating AI? A series of high-profile outages has highlighted the potential issues of allowing LLMs to build ever-larger portions of an organization’s codebase. However, experts say some of these concerns can be mitigated with a few key steps.

In the news…According to recent reporting from the Financial Times and CNBC, Amazon recently held an internal meeting to discuss several service outages. A briefing note viewed by the Financial Times stated that one of the “contributing factors” was GenAI usage “for which best practices and safeguards are not yet fully established.”

When contacted by IT Brew, Amazon spokesperson Maxine Tagay wrote in an email that only one outage was related to AI and none of the incidents involved AI-generated code. Additionally, Tagay shared that Amazon Web Services was not involved in the incidents.

Here’s what we know.CN

CYBERSECURITY

A man in a suit stands on a platform across from an avatar.

Getty Images

A lot can change in a year. A bad haircut can grow out, a fitness goal can become reality, or cyberattackers can realize the different ways to take advantage of employee digital twins (EDTs). One company believes the lattermost example isn’t hypothetical.

According to a new TrendAI report unveiled at RSAC on Wednesday, companies should expect malicious actors to compromise and abuse EDTs within the next 12 to 18 months. The kicker? Such attacks are expected to be worse than credential theft by the end of 2027 because unlike credentials, EDTs cannot be reset.

Like an onion. EDTs differ from AI assistants in that they are typically composed of four different components, which TrendAI describes as “layers”:

  • Knowledge. The layer of an EDT that has access to an employee’s expertise, processes, and skills.
  • Personality. The layer that understands an employee’s communication style and unique mannerisms.
  • Mindset. The layer that helps EDTs that emulate decision-making skills and logic of their owners.
  • Trust. The layer that shapes EDT relationships and interactions (e.g., knowing “whose ‘urgent request’ gets immediate action”).

Twinning!BM

Together With KPMG Managed Services

PATCH NOTES

Picture of data with "Clean Me" written on it + bottle of cleaner in front of it, Patch Notes

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top IT reads.

Stat: 13%. That’s the increase in ransomware attacks between February and March 2026, according to data from Comparitech. (Comparitech)

Quote: “Meta executives knew their products harmed children, disregarded warnings from their own employees, and lied to the public about what they knew.”—New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez after a landmark ruling holding Meta accountable for its impact on children (Platformer)

Read: Anthropic’s month from hell. (TechCrunch)

The new IT mindset: By providing an intelligent foundation for identity and device management, JumpCloud removes technical friction and gives IT teams the mental space to turn AI complexity into a career-defining advantage. Learn more.*

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