AI News Roundup – March 23, 2026
Visa prepares payment systems for AI agent-initiated transactions
Source: AI News | Published: 2026-03-19
Visa is testing new payment systems designed to process transactions initiated independently by AI software agents. This innovation marks a significant shift away from the traditional financial model that relies entirely on human buyers to authorise purchases.
NVIDIA wants enterprise AI agents safer to deploy
Source: AI News | Published: 2026-03-19
Announced at GTC 2026, the NVIDIA Agent Toolkit is a new open-source software stack designed specifically for businesses. It enables enterprises to safely deploy AI agents while maintaining strict control over their data and corporate liability.
OpenAI is throwing everything into building a fully automated researcher
Source: Artificial intelligence – MIT Technology Review | Published: 2026-03-20
OpenAI is refocusing its resources on creating a fully automated “AI researcher.” This advanced, agent-based system is designed to independently tackle large and complex problems without human intervention.
Claude Legal Prompt Shock, LegalOn GPT 5.4 Review, Legal Innovators +
Source: Artificial Lawyer | Published: 2026-03-20
This week’s legal tech news roundup highlights a surprising event where a Twitter user published 12 detailed legal prompts for the AI tool Claude. Additionally, the publication features a review of LegalOn GPT 5.4 and updates on Legal Innovators.
Webinar Replay: Why, and how, your data will make or break AI success in 2026
Source: Legal IT Insider | Published: 2026-03-20
A recent Legal IT Insider webinar explores why having clean, organised, and accessible data is crucial for law firms aiming to successfully implement AI by 2026. Without this strong data foundation, even the most advanced artificial intelligence tools will ultimately fail to deliver results.
Vereins – The reckoning, and the GenAI problem
Source: Legal IT Insider | Published: 2026-03-19
DLA Piper, the world’s third-largest law firm by revenue, has announced plans to dissolve its Swiss verein structure. According to analyst Neil Cameron, this major restructuring signals a broader reckoning for the verein business model, which is being further complicated by emerging generative AI challenges.
The 7 Frameworks to Understand Post-Labour Economics
Source: David Shapiro’s Substack | Published: 2026-03-18
Synthesising three years of extensive research, this work presents seven visual frameworks that explain the complexities of post-labour economics. These graphics provide a clear, structured way to understand how economies will transition and function in a future driven by automation and AI rather than traditional human labour.
🔮 Exponential View #566: A solar shield; AI agents; human judgment; China’s robots++
Source: Exponential View | Published: 2026-03-22
Exponential View issue #566 highlights emerging innovations, including a proposed solar shield for climate mitigation and the latest advancements in China’s robotics sector. The newsletter also explores the growing capabilities of AI agents and the evolving role of human judgment alongside these automated systems.
🔮 Jensen’s OpenClaw thesis
Source: Exponential View | Published: 2026-03-21
Jensen Huang’s “OpenClaw thesis” highlights a fundamental industry pivot where the explosive demand for AI inference is overtaking model training as the primary driver of computing. This transition completely reshapes the hardware landscape, making inference-optimised infrastructure and test-time reasoning the new focal points for AI growth and value creation.
The Sequence Opinion #827: Taming the Agentic Lobster: Learning from OpenClaw
Source: TheSequence | Published: 2026-03-19
“The Sequence Opinion #827” uses the OpenClaw project as a framework to explore the evolving landscape of modern AI agent architectures. It provides a concise overview of essential development patterns, lessons learned, and best practices for building these advanced agentic systems.
Why people really hate AI
Source: The Verge | Published: 2026-03-20
There is a growing cultural disconnect between companies enthusiastically rushing to integrate artificial intelligence and a general public that increasingly resents it. While businesses view AI as a revolutionary tool, everyday consumers are frustrated by its relentless, forced implementation into everyday life.
50% of Consumers Prefer Brands That Avoid GenAI Content
Source: Slashdot.org | Published: 2026-03-21
According to a recent Gartner survey, half of U.S. consumers prefer to do business with companies that do not use generative AI. Specifically, these shoppers want brands to avoid using AI-generated material in customer-facing content like advertising and promotional messaging.
Morning Brief Podcast: Who Controls AI in an Age of War?
Source: The Times of India | Published: 2026-03-17
Anthropic’s refusal to grant the Pentagon unrestricted access to its Claude AI prompted OpenAI to quickly step in and sign a classified defence contract. However, OpenAI’s controversial move sparked internal employee resignations and drove many users to migrate to Anthropic’s platform.
Videos
What People Really Want From AI
Source: The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News | Published: 2026-03-20
Anthropic conducted a massive global study of nearly 81,000 Claude users to determine what people actually want from artificial intelligence. The findings reveal that users across diverse cultures hold nuanced, coexisting hopes and expectations regarding the technology’s impact.
This report was automatically generated by AI and then lightly curated by humans for presentation purposes. All content belongs to the respective creators.