| How tech friction from AI is impacting software development and more. |
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SOFTWARE Code warriors  Morning Brew Design | As enterprises continue to implement AI solutions for coding, the growing pains are leading to an increase in AI tech friction. A new study from agentic platform Harness breaks down concerns over AI deployment, including how employee use of vibe coding is leading to extra work. Majorities of developers said reviewing AI-generated code for accuracy (53%) and fixing small bugs (52%) are top sources of tech friction. Trevor Stuart, Harness SVP, told IT Brew that the ROI for AI is tempered by the increase in friction and rework. That “invisible tax” often presents itself in added tasks that are difficult to measure, such as fixing vibe coding. Vibe tax.—EH |
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Sponsored By ServiceNow Do the work you love. Delegate the work you don’t.  | The hard part of AI isn’t the thinking. It’s the doing. AI was supposed to handle the parts of the job you hate. Instead, it just describes them, suggests what to do about them, and then leaves you to do it. That’s not help. That’s homework. ServiceNow’s Autonomous Workforce is different. Cases get resolved. Requests get processed. Loops get closed. And, most importantly, no extra work for you. With AI Specialists that deliver intelligence and execution, people can delegate to AI and get back to the work only they can do. The work that requires a person. With ideas. And judgment. And, you know, a pulse. Learn how to put AI to work for people. |
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CYBERSECURITY Ballot on  Getty Images | During the 2000 presidential election, Florida’s “hanging chads” kept a nation in suspense. Twenty-six years later, paper-based challenges seem quaint compared to the tech threats confronting current-day campaigns. The 2026 midterm elections will present more complex challenges, thanks largely to AI giving attackers an edge—and forcing defenders for political campaigns and federal, state, and local governments to catch up. Andrew Jones, co-founder and CPO at Adaptive Security, told IT Brew that AI’s evolving capabilities can put the good guys at a disadvantage. “These same technical tools can also be used by attackers to do things like manipulate elections, or deceive consumers, or deceive governments,” he said. “The technology is definitely there, and given the rise of AI, it’s given attackers more tools to be efficient and effective with these attacks.” Lock in.—EH |
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Sponsored By Retool  | Govern the AI app boom. AI is spinning up apps so fast. IT still has to govern them. Retool helps every AI-generated app inherit authorization, RBAC, and audit logs automatically, so production data does not become a surprise-and-delight liability. New Enterprise customers that sign up by Sept 30 get up to $10K in annual AI credits. |
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IT STRATEGY Just vibes  Amelia Kinsinger | Turns out, software engineers may not have got the short end of the stick in the “AI code apocalypse.” According to tech venture capital firm SignalFire’s 2026 State of Talent Report, software engineering was one of the jobs least impacted by AI automation last year, especially when compared to professions such as marketing and design. While overall hiring at large tech companies (including Alphabet, Meta, Apple, Amazon, and others) has fallen 25% since 2019, engineering hiring only decreased 11% during the same period. The researchers also found that software engineering was the most sought-after role at large tech companies, beating all other hiring. Apocalypse...later?—BM |
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patch notes  Francis Scialabba | Today’s top IT reads. Stat: 20 years. That’s how long X—or, as it was known, Twitter—has been around. (the New York Times) Quote: “We do not think PayPal’s new CEO will likely embrace what could be viewed as a low-ball offer.”—Andrew Jeffrey, research analyst with William Blair, on a joint offer from Stripe and private equity company Advent to buy online payment system PayPal (the Wall Street Journal) Read: India tries to expand smartphone manufacturing to nudge out China. (TechCrunch) *A message from our sponsor. |
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Jobs  | CollabWORK connects you to the hidden job market through IT Brew and other trusted channels. Browse roles curated specifically for this community by clicking through to the job board. |
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