Orchestrating Intelligence

Why AI Governance Is No Longer About Controlling Outputs, But Entire Systems For a while, the problem of artificial intelligence seemed relatively contained. Models generated answers, some brilliant, some flawed, and the risk could be summarized in a single, almost harmless phrase: “saying the wrong thing.” It was a problem of language, of content, of accuracy. Today, that framing feels outdated. With the rise of … Continue reading Orchestrating Intelligence

When AI Becomes Insurable…

… It Stops Being Magic and Starts Being Power It reads like a minor corporate update, the kind of post that floats through LinkedIn and disappears by lunch. ElevenLabs announces that its AI voice agents can now be insured. A certification, AIUC-1, validates safety, reliability, and security. Five thousand adversarial simulations. Enterprise readiness. Faster deployment. The language is procedural, almost dull. And yet, this is … Continue reading When AI Becomes Insurable…

Reid, You’re Right:…

… AI Won’t Need Bank Accounts—Because It’s Rewriting the Economy Itself There is a quiet assumption embedded in the architecture of the internet: that somewhere behind every transaction, there is a human deciding. That assumption is starting to break. In your recent piece, “Should we give AI a bank account?”, Reid Hoffman you don’t just suggest a shift—you outline a rupture, not software getting better … Continue reading Reid, You’re Right:…

Going Back to Facebook…

…unwantedly It started like digital time travel. After five or six years off Facebook, I found myself logging back in, not out of nostalgia but because work required it. I opened a new account, thinking I could keep things clean and separate, but platforms have long memories. Or maybe they are memory. Before long, Meta had stitched everything back together, collapsing the distance I thought … Continue reading Going Back to Facebook…

The Women Who Quietly Shaped My Career

Every career has visible milestones. Promotions. Titles. Companies whose logos look good on a résumé. But if you trace the real arc of a life, the turning points, the moments where direction quietly changes, it is rarely a company that did it. More often, it was a conversation. Or a person. Or sometimes a sentence that stays with you for thirty years. On International Women’s … Continue reading The Women Who Quietly Shaped My Career