Published on 00/00/0000
Last updated on 00/00/0000
Published on 00/00/0000
Last updated on 00/00/0000
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AI/ML
5 min read
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Here's the hard truth: while we've made incredible progress building individual AI agents, the infrastructure that would allow them to collaborate effectively still doesn't exist. This is a massive blind spot. The real power of agents isn't in what they can do alone, but in how they can work together—just like humans.
If you think about it, no single human expert can design and create a complex new material, diagnose and remedy a difficult medical condition, or build and deploy an enterprise app stack end-to-end. We collaborate with specialists. The same principle applies to AI agents, except we're missing the crucial "collaboration layer."
Without standardized ways for agents to discover each other, communicate, and coordinate, we're essentially trying to build the web without RPCs, HTTP, DNS, or TCP/IP. We're hitting a wall that isn’t just slowing progress, it’s fundamentally limiting what’s possible. We need an Internet of Agents.
After talking to hundreds of developers building multi-agent systems, we've identified four critical phases – Discover, Compose, Deploy and Evaluate – where standardized infrastructure is desperately needed.
When a developer wants to build a multi-agent application, their first questions are:
Today, there's no good answer to these questions. There isn't a good agent discovery tool, no standardized way to enable or verify compatibility, no reputation system. What developers need are components that would solve these issues, allowing developers to describe agent capabilities and making agent publishing and discovery simple and reliable.
Once a developer has identified suitable agents, they need to stitch them together to solve for the use case at hand:
This is where things get technically complex quickly. Developers need standard protocols for inter-agent communication across frameworks, to tap into function calls and tooling for accessing existing systems, workflow servers for defining and managing agentic workflows, along with schema extensions that define how agents from multiple frameworks, vendors, and organizations interact.
Now the multi-agent app is ready, and I need to run this agentic workflow, which introduces another set of challenges:
Developers cobble together custom solutions for each of these problems. What's needed are agent gateways that enable scalable agent-agent communication on existing infrastructure, and components for translating between different agentic frameworks and probabilistic outcomes.
Finally, once the multi-agent app is running, I need to evaluate and evolve the application:
This requires new and extended definitions for observability and evaluations for entire agentic workflows. Developers need an observability framework for monitoring and evaluating multi-agent systems, with feedback mechanisms to publish updated agent capabilities and improve performance.
What's striking is how much time developers spend reinventing wheels. Each team builds custom solutions for agent coordination, often with significant limitations:
These pain points show up consistently regardless of industry, use case, or company size. And they're holding back the entire ecosystem from reaching its potential.
Without standardized infrastructure components, multi-agent systems will remain brittle, insecure, and limited. We need open source tools and protocols that address these challenges head-on.
It’s important that partners across the AI ecosystem come together to develop practical solutions to these problems. In the coming weeks, we'll be announcing a major initiative and partners focused on building the foundational layers for secure, scalable agent-agent collaboration.
The potential of multi-agent systems is enormous—but only if we build the right infrastructure. Stay tuned for a significant announcement about how we'll tackle these challenges together, and how you can be part of building the Internet of Agents.
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