<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>schristoph.online</title><link>https://schristoph.online/tags/codingagents/</link><description>Personal homepage and blog of Stefan Christoph</description><generator>Hugo -- gohugo.io</generator><language>en-us</language><copyright>Stefan Christoph. All rights reserved.</copyright><lastBuildDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://schristoph.online/tags/codingagents/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>From Cloud-Native to AI-Native: What Actually Changes</title><link>https://schristoph.online/blog/from-cloud-native-to-ai-native/?utm=rss-feed</link><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://schristoph.online/blog/from-cloud-native-to-ai-native/</guid><description>&lt;h2 id="the-fifteen-year-echo">The Fifteen-Year Echo&lt;/h2>
&lt;figure>&lt;img src="https://schristoph.online/assets/2026-04-21-from-cloud-native-to-ai-native-fifteen-year-echo.png"
alt="Split-screen of a 2010 tech conference versus a 2025 stage with holographic AI agents">&lt;figcaption>
&lt;p>Fifteen years apart. Same stage. Different world.&lt;/p>
&lt;/figcaption>
&lt;/figure>
&lt;p>In 2010, Adrian Cockcroft stood on the QCon stage and told the audience that Netflix was running its entire business on a public cloud. Most people in the room thought he was crazy.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Fifteen years later, Cockcroft was back at QCon, this time explaining how he manages swarms of autonomous AI agents that produce several days&amp;rsquo; worth of code in fifteen minutes [1]. The audience reaction was different. Nobody called him crazy. They were taking notes.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Security Is Job Zero — Even (Especially) in the Age of Coding Agents</title><link>https://schristoph.online/blog/security-is-job-zero/?utm=rss-feed</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://schristoph.online/blog/security-is-job-zero/</guid><description>&lt;h2 id="20-and-two-hours">$20 and Two Hours&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>On February 28, 2026, security startup CodeWall gave an autonomous AI agent a single input: a domain name. Two hours and approximately $20 in API tokens later, the agent had full read/write access to the production database of McKinsey&amp;rsquo;s internal AI platform, Lilli [1] [2].&lt;/p>
&lt;p>The attack vector? SQL injection, a vulnerability class from the 1990s. But in a novel context: the injection was in JSON &lt;em>keys&lt;/em>, not values, which standard security scanners missed [3].&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>The Coding Agent That Doesn't Code</title><link>https://schristoph.online/blog/the-coding-agent-that-doesnt-code/?utm=rss-feed</link><pubDate>Sat, 14 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://schristoph.online/blog/the-coding-agent-that-doesnt-code/</guid><description>&lt;h2 id="the-friday-that-wrote-itself">The Friday That Wrote Itself&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Last Friday, I used a coding agent for eight hours straight. I didn&amp;rsquo;t write a single line of code.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>I prepared a customer meeting by pulling context from Slack threads, calendar events, and our CRM. I researched a technical paper on geometric memory architectures and wrote a structured analysis. I collected travel expense receipts from my email, train tickets, hotel invoices, an Uber receipt forwarded from my personal phone, downloaded the PDFs, and assembled them into an expense report. I curated a reading list from articles I&amp;rsquo;d bookmarked throughout the week. I drafted the research note you&amp;rsquo;re reading the seeds of right now.&lt;/p></description></item></channel></rss>