Notion Becomes an Agent Hub, Clio Hits Half a Billion
Listen on Spotify ↗Right. Notion just turned your workspace into an AI agent control centre, a legal tech firm you've probably never heard of is doing half a billion in revenue, and Mozilla's bug-hunting AI has basically no false positives. Let's get into it.
So, Notion — the productivity app that half of startup-land uses for notes, wikis, and project management — just launched a developer platform that lets you plug AI agents directly into your workspace. Not just chatbots. Actual agents that can pull from external data sources, run custom code, and sit alongside your documents like colleagues. You can now have an AI agent that monitors your sales pipeline, another that drafts weekly reports, and a third that pulls customer feedback from three different tools — all living inside the same interface where you're already working.
Why does this matter? Because the agent era isn't about switching to a new app. It's about agents embedding themselves in the tools you already use. Notion's betting that if they become the hub where your agents live, they own the next layer of work infrastructure. It's a direct counter to Microsoft's Copilot and Google's Workspace AI — but instead of bundling their own agent, they're saying: bring your own. Pick the agent that fits the job. That's a much more flexible offer, especially if you don't trust one company to do everything well.
What to watch: how fast developers actually build for this, whether enterprises trust third-party agents inside their workspace, and whether Notion can avoid becoming a security nightmare when you've got five different AI providers plugged into the same document tree.
Now, quick one on legal tech. A company called Clio — they make practice management software for law firms — just hit five hundred million dollars in annual recurring revenue. That's not a funding round. That's actual revenue. Clio's been around since 2007, but the last two years have been rocket fuel. Why? Because lawyers finally stopped pretending AI wasn't coming for the boring bits of their job — case management, billing, document drafting, client intake. Clio's AI tools handle that, and law firms are paying for it at scale.
Here's the tension, though. The same week Clio hits this milestone, Anthropic — who we've covered plenty — is pushing Claude deeper into legal workflows. So Clio's celebrating a half-billion-dollar milestone while also watching the foundation models get good enough to do what Clio's software does, but faster and cheaper. It's the classic build-versus-buy moment. Do law firms keep paying Clio, or do they just buy Claude and build their own workflows? Clio's bet is that integration, compliance, and trust still matter more than raw capability. We'll see if that holds.
And finally, back to Mozilla and that bug-hunting AI we touched on earlier this week. Mozilla's released a bit more detail, and it's worth revisiting. Their Mythos tool found two hundred and seventy-one security vulnerabilities across Firefox and related projects. The remarkable bit? Mozilla says it had almost no false positives. If you've ever worked with automated security scanners, you know that's borderline miraculous. Most tools drown you in noise — flagging things that aren't real problems, which means human reviewers spend half their time sorting through rubbish.
Mythos doesn't do that. It's accurate enough that Mozilla says they've "completely bought in" on using AI for security. That's a big cultural shift. This isn't experimentation anymore. It's infrastructure. And if it works at Mozilla's scale, it changes the economics of software security across the board. Faster patches, fewer breaches, lower cost to find the flaws before someone else does.
The flip side? If Mozilla can use AI to find vulnerabilities this efficiently, so can attackers. We covered Google stopping the first confirmed AI-developed exploit earlier this week. The gap between defence and offence is narrowing fast, and it's narrowing at AI speed. That's the new normal.
That's your lot. Notion's gone full agent platform, a legal software company you've never heard of is doing half a billion in revenue, and Mozilla's AI is finding bugs with almost no false positives. Three stories, five minutes, and not a single mention of paradigm shifts. You're welcome. See you next time.