Original Reddit post

A lot of agent demos focus on action. Send the email. Update the CRM. Book the meeting. Analyze the document. Handle the workflow. But in real systems, the more important question might be when the agent should not act. When the context is incomplete. When the data is outdated. When the action affects money or customers. When the outcome is hard to reverse. When a human should approve first. More autonomy sounds exciting, but controlled autonomy feels much closer to something companies can actually trust. What would make you comfortable letting an AI agent take real actions on your behalf? submitted by /u/Alpertayfur

Originally posted by u/Alpertayfur on r/ArtificialInteligence