How to teach SRE AI agents to fail safely and earn your team’s trust
Site reliability engineering is entering a new phase. As incidents become faster-moving, more data-rich and more complex, SRE teams are exploring agentic AI to help with alert triage, root cause analysis, runbook execution and mitigation planning. But in production, the question is not whether an agent can act; it is whether people can trust it to act safely, consistently and transparently when the system is under stress. This blog argues that trust is an engineering outcome, not a marketing promise. Trustworthy agentic SRE systems are built on a foundation of grounded telemetry, explicit safety boundaries, progressive autonomy, auditability and evaluation against real incidents. Why trust matters Traditional automation works well when the world is predictable. SRE work is different because incidents are messy, partial and time-sensitive, with ambiguous symptoms, shifting dependencies and business context that rarely fits into a neat playbook. A fluent AI agent that lacks system contex