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Applied AI·June 30, 2026·1 min read

Microsoft Teams is getting wants to block bad bots for good

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Native bot controls in Teams mean collaboration platforms are starting to act as security perimeters for AI agents and integrations. If your workflows depend on bots in chat, expect tighter governance and approval flows—plan for bot identity, permissions, and logging as first-class design constraints.

Applied AI

Exclusive: Meta and OpenAI alumni seek $400m for new AI lab

Another $400M lab from ex-Meta/OpenAI talent means the frontier stack is still fragmenting rather than consolidating—talent and capital are betting there’s room for differentiated research agendas, not just scaling incumbents. If you’re an applied team, assume the model landscape in 18–24 months will be more crowded and specialized, not fewer-but-bigger, and architect for swap-ability rather than single-vendor dependence.

Applied AI

Meta is telling engineers to handle Claude Code and Codex with care

Tightening internal rules on Claude Code and Codex shows how seriously large platforms now treat inadvertent model distillation and IP leakage—coding assistants are no longer “just tools,” they’re potential data exfil paths. Any org building proprietary models should adopt similar policies this quarter: define which external AIs are allowed, where, and with what redlines around sensitive code and datasets.