7,000 organizations. So we built them a planet.
Crossing a dream line called for more than a counter going up. The new member globe shows who is actually building the agentic web, everywhere.
Read post →Long-form posts on standards, governance, and what we're building.
Crossing a dream line called for more than a counter going up. The new member globe shows who is actually building the agentic web, everywhere.
Read post →Agent Identity & Discovery v2 makes AID the 0-th hop for agent discovery: a DNS-first endpoint and key anchor with sharper PKA, updated SDKs, and a cleaner migration path.
Read post →Brave joined Agent Community, then put us on the new-tab background for 24 hours. 4,777 signups, 1,424 organizations, zero incidents. Download the backgrounds at the bottom.
Read post →WorkOS auth.md gives agents a way to register with a service after they reach it. AID gives that flow a DNS-first, optionally key-proven first hop.
Read post →ICANN founding chair Esther Dyson on why public-facing AI agents need a 'Know Your Agent' regime — and why .agent should be community-governed, not auctioned.
Read post →AI agent discovery has not settled on one protocol; experiments are revealing a layered stack of DNS bootstrap, trust, registries, manifests, overlays, governance, and commerce.
Read post →A full walkthrough of how ICANN decides who gets a top-level domain in 2026: the application lifecycle, Community Priority Evaluation, auctions of last resort, fees, and timing, end to end.
Read post →A proposed §10.9.0 for draft-klrc-aiagent-auth: DNS-based first-hop discovery slots beneath OAuth metadata without conflict.
Read post →Brave endorsed the Agent Community on Tuesday. Membership surged 7x. Here is what we did behind the scenes to keep everything running.
Read post →We submitted draft-nemethi-aid-agent-identity-discovery-00 to the IETF Datatracker on March 16, 2026, documenting the original AID draft and _agent label-governance request.
Read post →We like SVCB. We plan to use it. But a third of DNS providers can't publish one yet, and agent adoption isn't waiting for them.
Read post →How AID DNS records can serve as a lightweight bootstrap layer for ARDP agent resolution and discovery. An optional, illustrative mapping for deployments where the ARDP authority is a DNS name.
Read post →How AID PKA addresses the cross-boundary agent authentication problem — and what questions remain open.
Read post →Every variable in your program is mutable state. Your source code is not. That deal is off. We now have systems that rewrite their own code as a normal part of operation.
Read post →Code Mode makes large APIs practical for agents by compressing tool surface area. AID stays focused on DNS-first discovery, so protocol routing remains simple and interoperable.
Read post →Google’s WebMCP makes websites agent-ready inside the browser. AID stays DNS-native so agents can discover endpoints from any domain, with or without a website.
Read post →Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) is now supported in AID, enabling agents to discover and transact with commerce endpoints via DNS.
Read post →Why ERC-8004 needs a DNS-first discovery layer to stay fresh and portable
Read post →A workflow-first newsroom built on taste, signal, and the agentic web
Read post →Moving from discovery to trusted discovery
Read post →signed interactions, or a product moat wrapped in a standard?
Read post →How does an AI agent know what to do when it hits a locked door on the web?
Read post →The discovery layer MCP forgot: AID uses a DNS TXT record to map domains to MCP endpoints so hosts can auto-connect.
Read post →Use DNS to find an agent’s front door: AID’s TXT record points to an A2A AgentCard so clients can discover and connect cleanly.
Read post →Typing a domain should just connect: AID adds a DNS-based address book so apps discover an agent’s URI and protocol automatically.
Read post →The MX-like record for agents: AID’s DNS TXT points any domain to its agent (MCP, A2A, or OpenAPI) for zero-friction discovery.
Read post →The SubPro Implementation Review Team working documents put the CPE bar at 12 out of 16 for 2026 — and it lines up with what we expected.
Read post →CPE, ICANN's bylaws, and what a decade of community applications tells us about the work ahead.
Read post →Registering the X account, buying the first domain, and setting out to build a community-governed .agent TLD.
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