The Linux Foundation Establishes an Open Standard for Interoperability among AI Agents
- The Linux Foundation has launched the Agent2Agent (A2A) project, an open standard for interoperability among AI agents.
- A2A was developed by Google to address the challenge of scaling AI agents across enterprise environments, regardless of platform or vendor.
- The protocol enables autonomous agents to discover each other, exchange information securely, and collaborate across systems.
- Participating brands include Google, Microsoft, AWS, Cisco, Salesforce, SAP, and ServiceNow, which aim to unite agents from multiple sources and platforms.
- A2A aims to remain vendor-neutral under the Linux Foundation’s governance, fostering a vibrant ecosystem of developers, researchers, and companies.
IBL News | New York
The Linux Foundation announced the launch, along with a hundred top tech companies, of the Agent2Agent (A2A) project, an open and interoperable ecosystem for AI agents.
This protocol was developed by Google to address the challenge of scaling AI agents across enterprise environments, regardless of platform, vendor, or framework.
A2A enables autonomous agents to discover one another, exchange information securely, and collaborate across systems.
“This allows developers and organizations to unite agents from multiple sources and platforms, improving modularity, mitigating vendor lock-in, and accelerating innovation,” said the Linux Foundation.
Brands like Google, Microsoft, AWS, Cisco, Salesforce, SAP, and ServiceNow participate in the project.
Under the Linux Foundation’s governance, A2A claims it will remain vendor-neutral and foster a vibrant ecosystem of developers, researchers, and companies.