When AI Agents Fail, Who Actually Gets Sued?

Regulatory bodies and enterprises are racing ahead with autonomous AI agents while liability frameworks remain absent—creating a legal vacuum that vendors are exploiting. The Register's reporting exposes a deliberate ambiguity: software makers pitch "autonomous business operations" while dodging responsibility through opaque licensing terms and disclaimers, leaving CFOs and compliance officers holding the bag for algorithmic decisions they can't fully audit or control. The gap between vendor promises and legal accountability will constrain enterprise AI adoption more than technical capability, forcing a reckoning with who owns the risk when an agent optimizes the wrong metric or misses a compliance edge case.