Each week, the Tomorrowist team publishes a video podcast and a deep-dive article on a single important trend facing businesses. But business leaders need a holistic view of the changing business landscape. Here are a few stories from around the web focused on other Tomorrowist-worthy trends that readers shouldn’t miss.
The AI Agent Era Requires a New Kind of Game Theory (Wired)
What to Know: Zico Kolter, a Carnegie Mellon professor and OpenAI board member, is sounding the alarm on an emerging artificial intelligence risk: autonomous agents that act on our behalf. Kolter’s work centers on how autonomous AI agents can be manipulated, misdirected, or even weaponized. For example, by prompting a compromised AI email assistant, someone could exfiltrate sensitive files or impersonate an executive. His team isn’t just poking holes in current models; it’s building smaller, inherently safer ones from scratch to explore what “secure-by-design” might look like.
Why It Matters: AI systems that can take autonomous actions are increasingly vulnerable to manipulation and exploitation — especially as these systems begin interacting with one another. Businesses deploying AI assistants, customer service bots, or internal task agents that focus solely on efficiency will be vulnerable to consumer backlash if they fail to prioritize security, control, and user trust from the start.
Can Using a Dumber Phone Cure ‘Brain Rot’?
(The New York Times)
What to Know: The $600 Light Phone III is the latest entry in the minimalist tech movement, which is aimed at combating “brain rot,” the mental fog and attention fatigue caused by constant scrolling and digital overload. This stripped-down device calls, texts, plays music, and provides directions — but skips social media, email, and internet browsing entirely. While minimalist phones aim to reduce screen time and restore focus, they struggle to fully replace smartphones in a world built around them; for example, minimalist phones do not offer access to modern conveniences such as mobile transit passes and garage door apps.
Why It Matters: As digital burnout grows, so does consumer interest in devices that promise a more intentional relationship with technology. But the Light Phone experiment reveals a deeper truth: Most modern infrastructure, such as urban mobility, workplace tools, and even basic errands, now assumes full smartphone access. Businesses designing for a more “mindful” future will need to strike a better balance between simplicity and functionality.
Did you know digital burnout can occur in the workplace, too? Develop a meaningful employee experience to drive engagement and organizational success with SHRM’s seminar.
The Golden Age of House Hunting Is Over (Business Insider)
What to Know: Compass, the largest U.S. real estate brokerage, is encouraging sellers to limit where and how their homes are listed online, discouraging them from immediately posting listings on public platforms like Zillow or Redfin. This approach is fueled by a National Association of Realtors rule change allowing delayed public listings. While offering sellers more control, this trend toward exclusive marketing could disrupt the centralized home search experience, raising concerns about transparency and accessibility in real estate.
Why It Matters: The rise of exclusive and delayed listings could reshape how homes are bought and sold. For real estate brokerages, controlling listings offers a strategic advantage — boosting agent recruitment, referral revenue, and direct deal-making. However, for platforms like Zillow, it poses an existential threat: If brokerages keep listings in-house, the value of search portals diminishes. This fragmentation may mark the end of the open-access era in real estate and lead to a more siloed — and competitive — future for home search.
A Sock-Sorting Vacuum Shows Home Robots Are in Their Early Stages (Bloomberg)
What to Know: Roborock’s new $1,900 Saros Z70 blends traditional robotic vacuuming with a major new feature: a robotic arm. The arm can slowly and deliberately pick up items such as socks, slippers, and tissues, marking a small but symbolic leap toward multifunctional home robots. While still limited in what it can do and far more expensive than a typical Roomba, the Z70 hints at the next generation of consumer robotics.
Why It Matters: The Saros Z70 may be clunky now, but it signals a future where home robots evolve from single-function tools into general-purpose assistants. As companies invest in AI-powered automation across consumer and commercial settings, expectations around how people interact with their environment and each other are shifting. Business leaders must begin thinking long term about how automation will reshape not only customer experiences but also roles, responsibilities, and workforce needs.
An organization run by AI is not a futuristic concept. Such technology is already a part of many workplaces and will continue to shape the labor market and HR. Here's how employers and employees can successfully manage generative AI and other AI-powered systems.