Is Claude Reflect a Wellness Tool or a Clever Retention Strategy?
Claude Reflect tracks AI usage, common chat topics, active hours, and personal habits through a dashboard available inside Claude.
DataRobot Blog·
A demand signal drops. A supplier goes dark. A competitor cuts prices. Your planning system gives you a dashboard. What you actually need is a decision in minutes, not weeks. That’s the gap SAP and DataRobot are closing together. Enterprise planning is undergoing a fundamental shift. For decades, organizations have relied on structured planning cycles,... The post From Planning to Action: SAP Enterprise Planning enhanced by DataRobot appeared first on DataRobot.
Read full articleClaude Reflect tracks AI usage, common chat topics, active hours, and personal habits through a dashboard available inside Claude.
Anthropic introduced a new feature called Reflect, a dashboard allowing Claude users to track and visualize their AI usage patterns, topics discussed, and task types. Beyond analytics, Reflect is designed to encourage mindful AI use, periodically prompting users with reflective questions and offering tools to set quiet hours or scheduled breaks. The feature also provides […]
For 50 years, SAS has worked alongside organizations tackling some of the world’s most complex challenges. While the technology has changed dramatically, one thing remains constant: our customers’ commitment to solving problems, improving outcomes and making a meaningful difference. In the first half of 2026, we shared 26 new customer [...] The post 50 years of innovation: Customer stories show what’s possible with data and AI appeared first on SAS Blogs.
Security company CrowdStrike has identified five new prompt injection techniques that could leave enterprises at risk. Prompt injections attacks exploit the growing use of AI within organizations . They work by tricking LLMs into accepting instructions that a human operator would recognize as dubious. The five new types of attack that CrowdStrike has added to its prompt injection taxonomy are: Trigger-Activated Rule Addition in which an attacker adds a new rule that looks innocuous at first, but can be triggered later to cause strange behavior within the model. Cognitive Token Suppression,a way to circumvent built-in safety measures by shifting the model’s linguistic choices away from established refusal patterns. Algorithmic Payload Decomposition,or delivering a message in multiple stages each of which appears innocent but that, when combined, can be assembled into a single command that is more threatening. Special Token Injection, an attack that can be compared to the embedding of co
Your agents are using your credentials, and that is the problem An engineer ships an agent to production. It needs to call an internal API, so it uses the key already sitting in the engineer’s environment. The agent runs. It also now holds every permission that engineer holds. That is the default state of most... The post Your agents are using your credentials, and that is the problem appeared first on DataRobot.
Claude’s new Reflect dashboard doesn’t just visualize how you use AI. It also subtly reinforces how much of your daily work now depends on Anthropic’s chatbot.
Organizations know AI is important. They’re investing in it, encouraging teams to use it and looking for ways to scale its value. But many organizations are still struggling to turn that priority into governed, scalable action. Leaders are left scrambling to feel confident about whether AI is being used responsibly, creating a widening gap between what leaders want from AI – innovation, efficiency and competitive [...] The post How to close the gap between AI adoption and governance appeared first on SAS Blogs.
GitHub continues to be a scintillating target for attackers because it sits in the middle of the software supply chain and gives threat actors three things they crave: source code, secrets, and automated pipelines to run amok in. Datadog Security Research has been tracking what it calls a “sustained pattern” of GitHub API abuse over the past several months that seeks to map organizations and their members. While individually these requests are “unremarkable,” they become dangerous when they move across environments for weeks at a time, and, worse, progress to full-out cloning. The biggest challenge is that they blend into normal API usage patterns. GitHub has been a goldmine for criminals looking to breach organizations because many development lifecycles are insecure, said David Shipley of Beauceron Security. Typically, threat actors are after API keys and cloud secrets. “Now with everyone being pushed to do more, faster, with AI agents coding, the treasure trove of secrets is likely