Graham Neray, CEO and co-founder of authorization startup Oso, can point to recent examples to make his case that AI is breaking authorization.
“In most companies today, we accept a certain amount of over-permissioning to make it possible for people to do their jobs. … And we can do that because there’s this finite limit on your time or resources as a human to do bad or stupid things,” Neray said.
“If you give an agent permission to do the same things that any human could do, there’s no guarantee that it’s going to do what…








