Table of Contents

Agent Protocol

The Agent Protocol originated as a community-driven open standard defining a unified HTTP API interface for communicating with AI agents. Initially developed by the AI Engineer Foundation, the concept of standardizing agent-to-agent communication evolved significantly.1) By mid-2025, Google launched the Agent2Agent (A2A) Protocol under the Linux Foundation's governance, which has become the primary open standard for secure, interoperable communication between AI agents across platforms and vendors.2)

Original Agent Protocol

The original Agent Protocol specification defined common REST API endpoints for interacting with any AI agent:

This standardization enabled framework-agnostic agent interaction. Frameworks like AutoGPT and BabyAGI adopted it to ensure agents built on different stacks could communicate through a common interface. The specification used JSON payloads over HTTP with clear lifecycle management for tasks and steps.

Agent2Agent (A2A) Protocol

The A2A Protocol, launched in June 2025 by Google and governed by the Linux Foundation, extends the vision of agent interoperability to enterprise scale:

Key Capabilities

Adoption

Over 100 technology companies are involved, including:

Relationship to MCP

A2A and MCP are complementary standards:

Together they form the emerging interoperability stack for agentic AI systems. Bain's 2025 analysis projects 5-10% of enterprise tech spending directed toward agent platforms using these standards over the next 3-5 years.

See Also

References

1)
AI Engineer Foundation. “Agent Protocol Specification.” github.com/AI-Engineer-Foundation/agent-protocol|github.com/AI-Engineer-Foundation/agent-protocol]], 2023.
2)
Google. “Agent2Agent (A2A) Protocol.” github.com/a2aproject/A2A|github.com/a2aproject/A2A]], 2025.