



AI has introduced a new lexicon of strange terms
prompts may be obsolete. Here today, gone tomorrow. An ‘agentic’ style AI will make prompts almost obsolete as they plan, decide and take action autonomously—a far cry from just Google answering questions.
Agentic is a term you’ll have heard in the latter half of 2025 and will continue to hear all through 2026.Agentic systems can be very capable, running a ‘multi-step task execution’, an entire chain of actions including detecting a problem, gathering information, and carrying out an entire process. When there’s no ‘human in the loop’, one presumes these systems will do whatever they choose to, whether we like it or not, unless we put in ‘guardrails’ and ‘safety specs’ in a big hurry.Agentic AI opens up the doors to plenty of dangers, not that we’re short of them already. A bad actor can hijack a process by inserting a ‘prompt injection’, causing chaos and compromising our security and privacy.
It’s such a frightening scenario that people have given over to ‘doomscrolling’, the term used for compulsively exploring scary AI scenarios, news, and predictions.I notice the most dire scenarios often come from the CEOs of the very companies that are making AI what it is, which is rather ironic. Sundar Pichai was asked in an interview whether AI could threaten all jobs, including CEOs. He said the role of a CEO might be one of the easier things for an AI to do someday.
Sam Altman of OpenAI joked that he would be “nothing but enthusiastic” if AI someday ran his company better than he could.Until doom arrives, though, everyone is on the AI bandwagon. This gave rise to the term ‘AI washing’, which means referring to something as a result of AI or powered by AI when it isn’t. There’s also AI ‘vishing’, which isn’t related but refers
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