In the spirit of a technology developed by AI company Anthropic, Microsoft sees the future of AI where there are lots of different systems, created by lots of different companies, all [[link]] working together, in peace and harmony. Or to put it in the same words that Microsoft used, create an "agentic web".
That's according to a report by , which relayed the views of Microsoft's chief technology officer, , ahead of the software company's annual . What Scott hopes to achieve is to have Microsoft's AI agents happily work with those from other companies, via a standard platform called the (MCP).
This is an open-source standard, created by Anthropic—an AI business that's a mere four years old. The idea behind it is that it makes it much easier for AI systems to access and share for training purposes, and when it comes to the specific area of AI agents, it should help them perform far better at their tasks.
It's not just about training data, though, as the accuracy of agentic AI depends heavily on something called reinforcement learning. Similar to how 'rewards' and 'punishments' affect the behaviour of animals, reinforcement learning helps AI agents focus on optimising their outputs based on achieving the biggest rewards.
Having AI agents share what works and what doesn't would certainly be useful in reinforcement learning, but it doesn't raise the question as to what happens if agents are simply left to their own devices. Does one simply assume that the network of agents will never accidentally pick a negative strategy over a positive one? What mechanisms would need to be created to prevent an 'agentic web' from spirally into a negative feedback loop?
Better brains than mine will surely have raised the same questions by now and, hopefully, developed systems to prevent all of this from happening.
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In the same way that certain stocks and shares are automatically sold and bought by computers, with next to no human interaction at all, we could be nearing the point where many aspects of our lives are decided for us by an enormous network of interconnected AI agents.
For example, customer support services for banks, emergency services, and other vital systems could well be entirely agentic AI within a decade or so.
I'm not knowledgeable enough about AI to sensibly judge if this is a really good thing or a really bad one, but my gut feelings suggest that the reality of the situation will end up being somewhere between the two extremes. Let's just hope is much closer to the former than the latter, yes?