logo
Rierino launches AI agent builder to power agents with full system awareness

Rierino launches AI agent builder to power agents with full system awareness

Zawya04-04-2025

Rierino, the next-generation low-code platform for enterprise innovation, announced today the launch of AI Agent Builder —a new capability designed to help organizations build and deploy intelligent agents that operate inside real systems, not just across conversations.
Unlike traditional approaches that focus on prompts or pre-scripted flows, Rierino's AI Agent Builder allows teams to give agents secure access to backend logic, real-time workflows, and internal APIs—enabling actions like creating a purchase request, retrieving customer history, or triggering multi-step automation based on enterprise data.
'The missing piece in AI agent development isn't more intelligence. It's more structure,' said Berkin Ozmen, Co-Founder and CTO of Rierino. 'AI agents will transform the enterprise by executing real actions, governed by real logic—where business value is actually created. That requires infrastructure purpose-built for execution, not just conversation.'
A Foundation for Enterprise-Grade Agents
AI Agent Builder is not a standalone feature, but a natural extension of Rierino's composable, low-code platform. With it, developers can transform any internal logic into agent-accessible capabilities governed by platform-level RBAC, validation rules, audit trails, and contextual schema definitions.
Agents can invoke saga flows, Rierino's real-time, event-driven orchestration components, as native tools with clearly defined inputs and outputs. These flows eliminate the need for custom glue code or fragile integrations and make structured actions accessible to large language models (LLMs) by design.
The platform supports integration with a wide range of LLM providers, including OpenAI, Google Gemini, Amazon Bedrock, Mistral, Anthropic, and on-prem deployments like Ollama or LocalAI—giving enterprises full flexibility over how and where their AI workloads run.
Agents built with Rierino are also channel-agnostic by default. They can be accessed through Rierino's UI, exposed as APIs, or triggered by external events—enabling seamless deployment across chat interfaces, operational systems, or custom frontends.
And because all logic is built using Rierino's microservice-based foundation, agent capabilities are modular, versioned, and reusable across teams and systems—ensuring long-term maintainability and scalability as business needs evolve.
From Prototypes to Production-Grade Agents
Most AI agent platforms today are optimized for experimentation—focused on prototyping flows, generating responses, or showing basic integrations. While that's helpful in the early stages, it falls short in real-world enterprise scenarios where agents must operate across multiple systems, comply with business policies, and deliver measurable outcomes.
Rierino's AI Agent Builder is built for the next phase: production-grade deployment. It enables teams to move beyond pilots and proof-of-concepts by equipping agents with structured tools, secure runtime environments, and composable business logic. Agents aren't just asked to generate ideas—they're expected to pull real-time data, initiate multi-step workflows, and act within enterprise guardrails.
This shift—from conversation to execution—is what turns AI from a novelty into a force multiplier for productivity, automation, and innovation at scale.
Not Just a Tool—An Agent Infrastructure Layer
While many platforms position agents as digital assistants or conversational layers, Rierino takes a fundamentally different approach: Agents are infrastructure-level components that should be embedded, orchestrated, and governed like any other part of a modern enterprise system.
AI Agent Builder is not a new direction—it's the natural evolution of Rierino's long-standing AI focus. As the first low-code platform to offer embedded AI capabilities dating back to 2020, Rierino has consistently pushed beyond surface-level automation. The 2023 launch of RAI, its embedded GenAI assistant, extended these capabilities into content, translation, and UI generation. AI Agent Builder now extends that same architectural depth to autonomous, action-driven agents.
With Rierino, every workflow, API, or rule-based decision can be exposed as a tool an agent can invoke—governed, automatically versioned, and monitored for safe execution. This turns your internal architecture into an AI-ready surface where agents can operate with full trust and transparency.
For organizations looking to scale AI safely and meaningfully, this isn't just another feature—it's a platform-level capability ensuring agents to evolve as systems grow, maintain compliance as policies shift, and deliver real business impact without introducing chaos or risk.
Rierino AI Agent Builder is now available to enterprise teams looking to bring scalable AI execution into their digital ecosystems.
About Rierino
Rierino is a next-generation technology company helping organizations accelerate digital transformation through low-code development, composable architecture, and embedded intelligence. Its platform empowers teams to create scalable microservices, orchestrate business logic, and build intelligent applications—without black-box constraints. Rierino is backed by the Future Impact Fund and was named one of Fast Company's Top 100 Startups to Watch.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

OpenAI enters into lucrative deal with U.S. government
OpenAI enters into lucrative deal with U.S. government

Tahawul Tech

timea day ago

  • Tahawul Tech

OpenAI enters into lucrative deal with U.S. government

OpenAI recently secured a $200 million contract with the US Department of Defence (DoD) to deploy AI tools across administrative functions, part of an initiative to integrate AI tech within government operations. In a statement, the company explained it is launching the OpenAI for Government initiative to provide AI expertise to public servants and support the US government in deploying the technology for the public good. The overriding aim of its work is to enhance the capabilities of government workers, helping to cut down on red tape and paperwork. Its first partnership under the new initiative will be a pilot programme with the DoD through its Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Office. It will help identify and prototype how frontier AI could transform administrative operations including improving how US military members and their families access healthcare, streamlining programme and data acquisition, and supporting proactive cyber defence. OpenAI added the initiative consolidates its existing government projects under one area, including the development of a version of ChatGPT for government workers, along with its work with space agency NASA and the Air Force Research Laboratory. Through the initiative, OpenAI will offer US federal, state and local governments access to its most advanced ChatGPT models, custom set-ups for national security, hands on support and an insight into future AI advancements. OpenAI added it is just getting started and is looking forward to helping US government leaders 'harness AI to better serve the public'. Source: Mobile World Live Image Credit: Stock Image/OpenAI

AI Copyright Quietly Redrawing Legal Lines
AI Copyright Quietly Redrawing Legal Lines

Arabian Post

time2 days ago

  • Arabian Post

AI Copyright Quietly Redrawing Legal Lines

Twelve consolidated copyright suits filed by US authors and news outlets against OpenAI and Microsoft have landed in the Southern District of New York, elevating the question of whether the extent of human input in AI training crosses the threshold of lawful fair use. The judicial panel cited shared legal and technical claims involving unauthorised use of copyrighted material, notably books and newspapers, as justifying centralised legal proceedings. The US Copyright Office added its authoritative voice in May, questioning whether AI training on copyrighted texts can be deemed fair use, particularly in commercial contexts. The Office clarified that while transformative use may be permissible in research, mass replication or competition with original works likely exceeds established boundaries. Its report highlighted that the crux lies in purpose, source, market impact and guards on output — variables which may render AI models liable under copyright law. A pivotal case involving Thomson Reuters and Ross Intelligence offers early legal clarity: a court ruled that Ross improperly used Westlaw content, rejecting its fair use defence. The judgement centred on the need for AI systems to 'add something new' and avoid copying wholesale, reinforcing the rights of content owners. This ruling is being cited alongside the US Copyright Office's latest guidance as foundational in shaping how courts may assess generative AI. ADVERTISEMENT Legal practitioners are now navigating uncharted terrain. Lawyers such as Brenda Sharton from Dechert and Andy Gass of Latham & Watkins are at the cutting edge in helping judges understand core AI mechanics — from training data ingestion to output generation — while balancing copyright protection and technological progress. Their work emphasises that this lifetime of litigation may not be resolvable in a single sweeping judgment, but will evolve incrementally. At the heart of many discussions lies the condition for copyright protection: human authorship. The US Copyright Office reaffirmed in a February report that merely issuing a prompt does not satisfy the originality requirement. It stated that current systems offer insufficient control for human authors to claim sole credit, and that copyright should be considered case‑by‑case, grounded in Feist's minimum creativity standard. Critics argue this stance lacks clarity, as no clear threshold for the level of human input has been defined. Certain jurisdictions are taking diverse approaches. China's Beijing Internet Court recently ruled in Li v Liu that an AI–generated image was copyrightable because the plaintiff had provided substantial prompts and adjustments — around 30 prompts and over 120 negative prompts — demonstrating skill, judgment and aesthetic choice. In the United Kingdom, the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 attributes authorship to the person who undertakes 'arrangements necessary' for a computer‑generated work, hinting that both programmers and users may qualify as authors depending on context. In contrast, India's legal framework remains unsettled. Courts have emphasised human creativity in ruling on computer‑generated works, as seen in Rupendra Kashyap v Jiwan Publishing and Navigators Logistics Ltd v Kashif Qureshi. ANI, India's largest news agency, has brought forward a high‑profile case against OpenAI, with hearings held on 19 November 2024 and 28 January 2025. The Delhi High Court has appointed an amicus curiae to navigate this untested area of copyright, with Indian lawyers emphasising that the outcome could shape licensing practices and data‑mining norms. India reserves copyright protection for creations exhibiting 'minimal degree of creativity' under its Supreme Court rulings such as Eastern Book Co v Modak. In February 2025, experts noted that determining whether AI training qualifies as fair dealing or whether generative AI outputs amount to derivative works will be pivotal. Currently, scraping content for AI training falls outside clear exemptions under Indian law, though the Delhi case could catalyse policy reform. ADVERTISEMENT Amid these legal fires, signs point toward statutory intervention. In the US, the Generative AI Copyright Disclosure Act would require developers to notify the Copyright Office of copyrighted works used in training models at least 30 days before public release. While UK policymakers are consulting on a specialised code of practice, India lacks similar formal mechanisms. The evolving legal framework confronts a fundamental philosophical and commercial dilemma: making space for generative AI's potential innovation without undermining creators' rights. AI developers contest that mass text and data mining fuels advanced models, while authors and journalists argue such training must be controlled to safeguard original expression. Courts appear poised to strike a balance by scrutinising the nuance of human input, purpose and impact — not by enacting sweeping exclusions.

Microsoft prepared to abandon high-stakes talks with OpenAI, FT reports
Microsoft prepared to abandon high-stakes talks with OpenAI, FT reports

Zawya

time3 days ago

  • Zawya

Microsoft prepared to abandon high-stakes talks with OpenAI, FT reports

Microsoft is prepared to abandon its high-stakes negotiations with OpenAI over the future of its alliance, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday. The tech giant has considered pausing discussions with the ChatGPT maker if the two sides remain unable to agree on critical issues such as the size of Microsoft's future stake in OpenAI, the report said, citing people familiar with the matter. The company plans to rely on its existing commercial contract to maintain access to OpenAI's technology until 2030, according to the FT report. Microsoft and OpenAI did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for comment on the report. OpenAI executives have considered accusing Microsoft of anticompetitive behavior in their deal, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday, adding that both the companies are discussing revising the terms of Microsoft's investment, including the future equity stake it will hold in the AI startup. "Talks are ongoing and we are optimistic we will continue to build together for years to come," the companies said in a statement in response to the WSJ report. Microsoft's multi-billion dollar investments into OpenAI has been a key factor in positioning it as a leading player in the artificial intelligence space. OpenAI requires approval from Microsoft, its major backer, to complete its transition into a public-benefit corporation, which it believes will make it easier to raise more capital. (Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru and Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Maju Samuel)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store