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CommentaryAI agents

Technology Innovation Institute: AI agents need proof, not promises

By
Najwa Aaraj
Najwa Aaraj
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By
Najwa Aaraj
Najwa Aaraj
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June 23, 2026, 5:30 AM ET

Dr. Najwa Aaraj, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) at the Technology Innovation Institute (TII), has a PhD with Highest Distinction in Applied Cryptography and Embedded Systems Security from Princeton University (USA), and has extensive expertise in applied cryptography, trusted platforms, security architecture for embedded systems, software exploit detection and prevention systems, and biometrics.

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Dr. Najwa Aaraj, Chief Executive Officer at the Technology Innovation Institute.courtesy of TII
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For most of the generative AI era, enterprises judged AI by what it could do. Could the model summarize a contract, answer a customer, support an analyst or a clinician? That test still holds. It is no longer enough.

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A harder phase is underway. Organizations are deploying agents that retrieve sensitive data, call tools and APIs, update records and act inside live business systems. The job has changed from producing content to performing tasks. That changes the evidence enterprises need before they can trust these systems.

When a chatbot returns a wrong answer, someone usually catches it and fixes it. When an agent moves money inside a payments platform, alters a record in a hospital network or pushes code into production, the damage is harder to contain. Accuracy remains essential but accountability is now the harder problem. The enterprise must be able to show what an agent did, which model and code it executed, where it ran, what data it accessed and whether it stayed inside approved limits.

Agents collapse the distance between software output and business consequence. A model that recommends an action carries one kind of risk. An agent that takes the action carries another. As agents reach into email, databases, code repositories and financial workflows, they increasingly function like non-human insiders. They have no intent, yet they can accumulate privileges, spread errors and create exposure at machine speed.

Traditional oversight was not built for this. Human review still belongs in sensitive moments. But no enterprise can station a person in front of every action and still expect the productivity that justified the agent in the first place. The task is to let autonomy operate inside limits that are clear, enforceable and provable.

Independent evidence is the hard part. Companies have built meaningful governance around AI agents. Policies, oversight committees, post-incident reviews and emerging control planes help register agents, enforce policy, manage identity and log activity across agent fleets. Those capabilities are necessary, but they stop short of independent verification.

That is the gap. As agents grow more capable and more autonomous, trust has to be validated at the moment of execution.

In high-assurance engineering, trust lives in the architecture and is tested and backed by evidence. Enterprise AI is heading to the same place. Confidence cannot rest on documentation or vendor claims. Organizations need a way to verify behavior when it counts.

Consider a finance agent with authority to update vendor records and route payments within an ERP system. To deliver value, it requires access to sensitive financial data and permission to act.

Policy may say the agent can touch only approved records, use only approved tools and escalate certain decisions to a person. The policy is not evidence that any of that happened. Logs may capture part of the story, and they are often partial, scattered or impossible to validate on their own.

The enterprise needs a stronger record. Which model was running when the decision was made? Was it the approved version? Did it run inside a protected environment? Did it reach only the data it was cleared to use? Were the required approvals enforced before it acted? And can an auditor, a regulator or a partner confirm the answers?

This points to the distinction that will define the next phase of enterprise AI. Assurance gives organizations a claim about expected behavior. Evidence gives them a way to validate actual behavior. Enterprises have plenty of the first and still need more of the second.

The building blocks already exist. Confidential computing protects data while it is being processed, not only when it sits in storage or moves across a network. Hardware-based attestation confirms that approved software is running in the environment it should be. Cryptographic records can make execution history and policy enforcement resistant to tampering. Strong identity frameworks establish which agents are operating and what each is allowed to do. Combined, these mechanisms can provide verifiable proof that a specific agent version executed in an approved environment, accessed only authorized data and tools, and enforced required policies before taking action.

This is why verifiable execution belongs alongside the control plane, not against it. The control plane enforces policy and records what happened. Attestation gives outside parties a way to confirm that the governance held, without taking the platform’s word for it. Together they created a level of trust that neither can achieve alone.

The demand for independent evidence will not land evenly. It will hit hardest where accountability and adoption are inseparable. Banks, hospitals, government agencies, defense organizations, critical infrastructure operators and sovereign AI programs all need systems they can govern, audit and defend.

Open standards will be essential because enterprises increasingly operate across multiple clouds, models and agent frameworks. Trust cannot depend on a single vendor acting as the sole authority for verification. No single cloud provider or model developer can be the sole authority on trust. Enterprises will need interoperable methods to verify how agents behave across different platforms and stacks. Early work on agent attestation and verifiable execution shows where this is going. AI governance must be transparent, portable and independently verifiable.

The same principle has a longer clock. Systems deployed today may still be operating years from now, while regulations, threats and security requirements keep moving. If audit records are expected to support trust years later, the cryptography used to protect them also has to evolve. Quantum-era risk adds another layer of concern. Anyone building AI infrastructure for high-value data should design for cryptographic agility now, so security can be updated as standards shift rather than locked to today’s assumptions.

The next phase of AI will not be settled by capability alone. Better models, greater scalability, lower costs and smoother integration still count. But the systems that earn the deepest place in enterprise operations will be the ones that can answer a harder demand. Can they show they acted within bounds? As agents take on more authority, that has to become a requirement, not an aspiration.

For years the defining question in AI has been what these systems can do. For the decade ahead it will be what organizations can verify they did.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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By Najwa Aaraj
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