
Leads to AI strategy changes
Justin Greis, CEO of consulting firm Acceligence, said he also expects this development to lead to major AI strategy changes.
“I can easily imagine governance platforms consuming those signals alongside prompts, outputs, identity information, policy decisions, and tool activity,” he said. “A future AI control plane could continuously evaluate whether an agent recognized an attempted prompt injection, understood that sensitive information was involved, detected conflicting objectives, or showed evidence that it was reasoning toward an unsafe action before that action was ever executed. Those signals become inputs into policy enforcement, human escalation, audit logging, and trust scoring across enterprise AI environments.”
This has practical implications for CIOs today, he pointed out, “because it changes how they evaluate AI vendors. A year ago, enterprises primarily asked about model accuracy, latency, security, and cost. Increasingly, procurement teams will also ask how much operational visibility vendors provide into agent behavior, reasoning quality, policy compliance, safety monitoring, and auditability.”