Business
DeepL unveils autonomous AI agent for businesses
- Designed to automate a wide range of business workflows ranging from finance to sales, marketing, customer support and localization
- Currently in beta testing with select customers, with general availability coming soon
NEW YORK and COLOGNE, Germany, Sept. 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — DeepL, a global AI product and research company, today unveiled DeepL Agent, an autonomous AI agent designed to streamline and automate a wide variety of knowledge worker tasks. The new solution brings the quality, precision and security that DeepL is known for – and its deep expertise in language that underpins most enterprise workflows – to the rapidly growing agentic AI market. It is currently in beta and being launched on DeepL AI Labs, the company’s hub for innovation and upcoming projects.
“DeepL has always been a leader in AI innovation, driven by our commitment to cutting-edge research and scaling AI’s impact across businesses worldwide. For years, we’ve invested in understanding and solving complex language challenges with AI, which demand the highest levels of precision, context-awareness and security. This strong background in research gives us a natural advantage in the agentic space in building tools that can understand, reason and then act across a wide range of tasks,” said Jarek Kutylowski, CEO and Founder, DeepL.
“Which is why we’re excited to preview our latest product, DeepL Agent – an autonomous, secure AI agent designed to take on the time-consuming, repetitive tasks knowledge workers face every day. Now in beta testing with some of our global customers, this is an exciting natural next step for DeepL in our mission to solve real-world challenges with purpose-built AI and is just the beginning of a tool that we believe will redefine how businesses operate.”
Building on DeepL’s heritage of developing cutting-edge enterprise AI tools trusted by over 200,000 business customers worldwide and the company’s unmatched expertise in the language-related fields where context, precision and security are essential, DeepL Agent introduces a new autonomous AI agent for businesses – one designed to empower knowledge workers by completing repetitive, time-intensive tasks across a wide variety of functions, thereby scaling users’ capacity and productivity.
The agent is built to operate entirely within each user’s digital environment, responding to natural language commands to carry out complex workflows safely and independently. It does this by using virtual versions of standard tools, like a keyboard, browser and mouse, so it can act on the user’s behalf through existing interfaces. It can handle nearly any task a human can do with computer systems, moving seamlessly across users’ tools and workflows and continually improving its performance over time.
And while DeepL Agent is multilingual, its applications extend far beyond language-related tasks: the general-purpose agent is designed to support a wide range of business functions and use-cases, making it a transformative companion enterprise-wide for teams ranging from sales and finance, to marketers, localization specialists, HR professionals and more. For example, the agent can autonomously pull insights for sales teams, automate invoice processing for finance, or handle document translation and approvals for localization teams.
“Imagine having a super efficient workplace assistant that understands your needs and can tackle any task you give it, whether that’s analyzing a report or managing internal invoices, just by giving it simple directions like you would any colleague. That’s what DeepL Agent does. It’s made to understand you, so that you can just describe the actions you want it to take and it will handle the rest,” said Stefan Mesken, Chief Scientist, DeepL. “We’ve also built the agent to learn from existing interactions, so that over time its support will become even more personalized and attuned to each user’s needs and daily workflows.”
DeepL is also committed to ensuring that DeepL Agent meets the enterprise-grade levels of quality and security it is known for, and has built the agent with multi-level safeguards giving not only individual users but also admin, team leads and top level management direct control over its use and outputs. These include task monitoring tools for real-time oversight, the ability to pause or review actions at any time, and options for human-in-the-loop validation and approvals to ensure the highest degree of accuracy and decision-making.
DeepL Agent will continue pilot testing in beta with select partners before becoming generally available in the coming months. For more information and for updates on the agent’s progress, visit DeepL AI Labs at deepl.com/ai-labs.
About DeepL
DeepL is a global AI product and research company focused on building secure, intelligent solutions to complex business problems. Over 200,000 business customers and millions of individuals across 228 global markets today trust DeepL’s Language AI platform for human-like translation, improved writing and real-time voice translation. Building on a history of innovation, quality and security, DeepL continues to expand its offerings beyond the field of Language, including the soon to be released DeepL Agent – an autonomous AI assistant designed to transform the way businesses and knowledge workers get work done. Founded in 2017 by CEO Jaroslaw “Jarek” Kutylowski, DeepL now has over 1,000 passionate employees and is supported by world-renowned investors including Benchmark, IVP, and Index Ventures. For more information on DeepL, visit www.deepl.com.
SOURCE DeepL
Business
Jaguar Land Rover suppliers ‘face bankruptcy’ due to hack crisis

The past two weeks have been dreadful for Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), and the crisis at the car maker shows no sign of coming to an end.
A cyber attack, which first came to light on 1 September, forced the manufacturer to shut down its computer systems and close production lines worldwide.
Its factories in Solihull, Halewood, and Wolverhampton are expected to remain idle until at least Wednesday, as the company continues to assess the damage.
JLR is thought to have lost at least £50m so far as a result of the stoppage. But experts say the most serious damage is being done to its network of suppliers, many of whom are small and medium sized businesses.
The government is now facing calls for a furlough scheme to be set up, to prevent widespread job losses.
David Bailey, professor of business economics at Aston University, told the BBC: “There’s anywhere up to a quarter of a million people in the supply chain for Jaguar Land Rover.
“So if there’s a knock-on effect from this closure, we could see companies going under and jobs being lost”.
Under normal circumstances, JLR would expect to build more than 1,000 vehicles a day, many of them at its UK plants in Solihull and Halewood. Engines are assembled at its Wolverhampton site. The company also has large car factories in China and Slovakia, as well as a smaller facility in India.
JLR said it closed down its IT networks deliberately in order to protect them from damage. However, because its production and parts supply systems are heavily automated, this meant cars simply could not be built.
Sales were also heavily disrupted, though workarounds have since been put in place to allow dealerships to operate.
Initially, the carmaker seemed relatively confident the issue could be resolved quickly.
Nearly two weeks on, it has become abundantly clear that restarting its computer systems has been a far from simple process. It has already admitted that some data may have been seen or stolen, and it has been working with the National Cyber Security Centre to investigate the incident.
Experts say the cost to JLR itself is likely to be between £5m and £10m per day, meaning it has already lost between £50m and £100m. However, the company made a pre-tax profit of £2.5bn in the year to the end of March, which implies it has the financial muscle to weather a crisis that lasts weeks rather than months.
JLR sits at the top of a pyramid of suppliers, many of whom are highly dependent on the carmaker because it is their main customer.
They include a large number of small and medium-sized firms, which do not have the resources to cope with an extended interruption to their business.
“Some of them will go bust. I would not be at all surprised to see bankruptcies,” says Andy Palmer, a one-time senior executive at Nissan and former boss of Aston Martin.
He believes suppliers will have begun cutting their headcount dramatically in order to keep costs down.
Mr Palmer says: “You hold back in the first week or so of a shutdown. You bear those losses.
“But then, you go into the second week, more information becomes available – then you cut hard. So layoffs are either already happening, or are being planned.”
A boss at one smaller JLR supplier, who preferred not to be named, confirmed his firm had already laid off 40 people, nearly half of its workforce.
Meanwhile, other companies are continuing to tell their employees to remain at home with the hours they are not working to be “banked”, to be offset against holidays or overtime at a later date.
There seems little expectation of a swift return to work.
One employee at a major supplier based in the West Midlands told the BBC they were not expecting to be back on the shop floor until 29 September. Hundreds of staff, they say, had been told to remain at home.
When automotive firms cut back, temporary workers brought in to cover busy periods are usually the first to go.
There is generally a reluctance to get rid of permanent staff, as they often have skills that are difficult to replace. But if cashflow dries up, they may have little choice.
Labour MP Liam Byrne, who chairs the Commons Business and Trade Committee, says this means government help is needed.
“What began in some online systems is now rippling through the supply chain, threatening a cashflow crunch that could turn a short-term shock into long-term harm”, he says.
“We cannot afford to see a cornerstone of our advanced manufacturing base weakened by events beyond its control”.
The trade union Unite has called for a furlough system to be set up to help automotive suppliers. This would involve the government subsidising workers’ pay packets while they are unable to do their jobs, taking the burden off their employers.
“Thousands of these workers in JLR’s supply chain now find their jobs are under an immediate threat because of the cyber attack,” says Unite general secretary, Sharon Graham.
“Ministers need to act fast and introduce a furlough scheme to ensure that vital jobs and skills are not lost while JLR and its supply chain get back on track.”
Business and Trade Minister Chris Bryant said: “We recognise the significant impact this incident has had on JLR and their suppliers, and I know this is a worrying time for those affected.
“I met with the chief executive of JLR yesterday to discuss the impact of the incident. We are also in daily contact with the company and our cyber experts about resolving this issue.”
Business
AstraZeneca pauses £200m Cambridge investment

Mitchell LabiakBusiness reporter and
Simon JackBusiness editor

AstraZeneca has paused plans to invest £200m at a Cambridge research site in a fresh blow to the UK pharmaceutical industry.
The project, which was set to create 1,000 jobs, was announced in March 2024 by the previous government alongside another project in Liverpool, which was shelved in January.
Friday’s announcement comes after US pharmaceutical giant Merck scrapped a £1bn UK expansion, blaming a lack of government investment, and as President Donald Trump pressures pharmaceutical firms to invest more in the US.
An AstraZeneca spokesperson said: “We constantly reassess the investment needs of our company and can confirm our expansion in Cambridge is paused.”
Over the last 10 years, UK spending on medicines has fallen from 15% of the NHS budget to 9%, while the rest of the developed world spends between 14% and 20%.
Meanwhile, pharmaceutical companies have been looking to invest in the US following Trump’s threats of sky-high tariffs on drug imports.
In July, AstraZeneca said it would invest $50bn (£36.9bn) in the US on “medicines manufacturing and R&D [research and development]”.
Earlier this week Merck, which had already begun construction on a site in London’s King’s Cross which was due to be completed by 2027, said it no longer planned to occupy it.
The multi-national business, known as MSD in Europe, said it would move its life sciences research to the US and cut UK jobs, blaming successive governments for undervaluing innovative medicines.

AstraZeneca’s announcement on Friday means none of the £650m UK investment trumpeted by the last government will currently happen.
The paused Cambridge project would have been an expansion of its existing Discovery Centre, which already hosts 2,300 researchers and scientists.
The stoppage comes after it scrapped plans to invest £450m in expanding a vaccine manufacturing plant in Merseyside in January, blaming a reduction in government support.
It said at the time that after “protracted” talks, a number of factors influenced the move, including “the timing and reduction of the final offer compared to the previous government’s proposal”.
Successive UK governments have pointed to life sciences as one of its most successful industries.
Former chancellor Jeremy sector said the sector was “crucial for the country’s health, wealth and resilience” while Chancellor Rachel Reeves said AstraZeneca was one of the UK’s “great companies” days before it scrapped its Liverpool expansion.
Business
CBA, NAB and other big banks building AI agents as business banking competition heats up

Major lenders are building artificial intelligence-powered “agents” – software that can do the same work as humans – in their business banking divisions, as the battle for AI supremacy in financial services intensifies despite workforce concerns about the risk to jobs.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia is building what it describes as “virtual relationship managers” in its business bank. The customer-facing technology is in a pilot stage as the bank discusses the timing of a market rollout with regulators.
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