AI Agent News Today
Tuesday, July 14, 2026Nous Research’s Hermes (open-source) is back in the funding headlines — new round in progress
What changed: TechCrunch reports Nous Research, the open-source team behind the Hermes agent, is in talks for a new financing round and is expanding Hermes’ built‑in “skills” and hosted options that let users run agents locally or in the cloud.
Why it matters: If you build or buy agentic systems, Hermes is now a high‑traction, production‑grade alternative to closed systems — meaning faster prototyping (local runs) and easier scale (hosted tiers) with a large developer community to draw skills from.
Try/watch: If you’re evaluating agent stacks this quarter, spin up Hermes locally to validate behavior, measure cost and observability, and review its skill‑repository governance (who can publish skills, how updates are reviewed). Demand vendor evidence of secure defaults before production deployment.
Apple’s trade‑secrets complaint against OpenAI raises operational and hiring risk questions
What changed: TechCrunch reviewed Apple’s July 13 complaint alleging a former Apple engineer downloaded confidential files after joining OpenAI, and the case frames recruitment and insider‑access practices as business risks for AI labs and their customers.
Why it matters: Founders and buyers of agentic AI should treat hiring, credential deprovisioning, and supplier audits as first‑order security controls — IP and data‑access lapses at a lab or integrator can cascade into litigation, service disruption, or lost trust for customers using agents with deep access.
Try/watch: Tighten vendor onboarding/offboarding controls, require proof of secure data handling in contracts (logs, least‑privilege access, audited deprovisioning), and include clear indemnities or escrow arrangements when agents will touch proprietary data. Monitor the lawsuit for any court findings that change best practices.
Supio launches Supio Agent for plaintiff law — vertical, compliant agentic workflows
What changed: Supio announced on July 13 that it launched Supio Agent, an end‑to‑end agentic platform for plaintiff law (intake, case workflows) and says the platform runs inside HIPAA and SOC 2 Type II compliant systems and integrates with Thomson Reuters research.
Why it matters: Vertical, compliance‑first agents are the clearest near‑term buyer opportunity: legal and regulated buyers can get productivity gains without forcing custom security work — but claims need verification (compliance reports, data residency, audit logs).
Try/watch: For regulated teams, run a short pilot that verifies compliance artifacts (SOC 2 report, HIPAA BAAs), test the agent’s audit trail for discrete decision points, and confirm human‑in‑the‑loop gates for high‑risk actions before scaling beyond intake or drafting tasks.
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