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An AI security company’s tango with a deepfaked job candidate.

Then it’s Thursday! Are you grindmaxxing? Using AI to mog your coworkers? Are we too old to be trying these references out in the newsletter?

In today’s edition:

Deep cover

Pilot error

Climate control

—Brianna Monsanto, Patrick Kulp, Eoin Higgins

CYBERSECURITY

Illustration and interpretation of a deepfake detector

Francis Scialabba

Many people start off the new year with fun, low-stakes resolutions. Jason Rebholz, co-founder and CEO of Evoke Security, had a more unusual beginning to his 2026: He inadvertently interviewed a deepfaked candidate for a security researcher role.

It all started with a LinkedIn post. In January, Rebholz used LinkedIn to promote a few vacant roles at his AI security company. He received a message from an individual who claimed to know just the right person for an open security researcher position.

“It wasn’t somebody that I had known before, but this is kind of the nature of dealing with posting things publicly,” Rebholz said.

Keep an eye on it.BM

Presented By The Crew

IT STRATEGY

An employee at an office desk with mouse clicker arrows pointing in different directions with highlighted text boxes.

Illustration: Anna Kim, Photo: Getty Images

A screenshot buried in the comment section of a Marc Benioff LinkedIn post around a year ago gave Salesforce’s Bernard Slowey a jolt. It showed the then-new Agentforce help portal directing the customer to a Salesforce competitor.

“I was literally like, ‘Oh my god, what has happened here? This is not good. My job is going to be gone tomorrow,’” Slowey, who is—spoiler alert—still Salesforce’s SVP of digital customer success, told us.

You may have heard the now-infamous stat that 95% of enterprise generative AI pilots fail before they reach production. Or maybe you have some thoughts on why that MIT report’s methodology was flawed. In any case, abundant data show that a sizable chunk of AI prototypes don’t go as planned—and ROI is questionable.

More on CFO Brew.PK

HARDWARE

earnings extreme weather

John Finney Photography/Getty Images

Nothing is free from consequences of the climate crisis—including data centers.

Threats to tech infrastructure from heat, flooding, and other weather-related dangers are not a new phenomenon, nor are they unique to data centers. But as the industry builds capacity to manage the AI boom, concerns over the climate crisis’s impact are growing.

Siddartha Jha, CEO of climate solutions platform Arbol, sees the danger as an opportunity for the tech industry to adjust its priorities toward climate risk management. The money involved is not a trivial concern, he added.

“Your cost structure can be very linked to weather,” Jha said.

Climate central.EH

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: 800 million. That’s how many people reportedly use ChatGPT on a weekly basis. (CNBC)

Quote: “We’re focusing on rapid commercialization.”—Roxanne Varza, director at business incubator Station F, which partners with companies like OpenAI and Meta (Wired)

Read: Elon Musk looks to the moon to keep investors interested. (TechCrunch)

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