From "Create Proxy" to "Enable Proxy Communication": A2A turns multi-proxy communication into infrastructure

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A2A Treats Agent Communication as Infrastructure, Not as “Innovation” to Boast About

LangChain’s announcement positions A2A as water, electricity, and coal—nothing revolutionary. It directly integrates into LangSmith Deployments, betting on open protocols to connect ecosystems fragmented by frameworks like LangGraph and CrewAI—developers no longer need to pick sides. Earlier this year, Google donated A2A to the Linux Foundation, bringing in over 50 partners including Salesforce and SAP. The core idea is: standardize agent communication so enterprises can share capabilities without exposing their implementation details.

Microsoft is following up with endorsement on Azure AI Foundry. This trend suggests A2A might gradually weaken vendor lock-in, but current discussions on social media mostly focus on how to integrate, with few people talking about deeper industry impacts.

Honestly: calling A2A a “game-changer” at this stage is a bit premature. The current implementations mainly revolve around “discovery”—getting agents to find each other and connect—rather than “dynamic negotiation.” The protocol standards themselves confirm this. The true impact depends on when the toolchains mature.

  • Enterprise workflows are extended: A2A uses JSON-RPC over HTTP, supporting collaboration among multiple agents over longer periods. IBM sees opportunities in hybrid workflows, but if authentication systems can’t keep pace with MCP evolution, complexity will quickly spiral out of control.
  • Easier for developers to get started: Built-in support in LangSmith lowers the barrier. Microsoft claims over 70k enterprises are using tools like Semantic Kernel, indicating a market demand for “plug-and-play” solutions.
  • Google and Anthropic face off again: Google donating A2A to the Linux Foundation appears to be a countermeasure against Anthropic’s MCP. The coexistence of two standards creates an awkward situation that can’t be avoided.

Behind the Protocol Dispute, Vendors Are Doing the Math

The design choices of A2A—default security, cross-modal capabilities, based on HTTP and Server-Sent Events—force vendors to choose between openness and competitive advantage. IBM calls A2A a “universal translation layer” between agents, emphasizing its complementarity with MCP; but feedback from all sides largely remains aligned with their original stances. Optimists envision building a “proxy economy” on Solana, while cautious voices point out the lack of serious skepticism either indicates broad consensus or that the industry hasn’t yet grasped the difficulty of deploying complex multi-agent systems.

In the short term, the release of SDKs for Python, Go, JavaScript, and partner programs are catalysts. A risk to watch: if Microsoft deeply integrates A2A into Copilot Studio, the advantage of large cloud providers will further grow, squeezing bargaining power for startups in cross-cloud interoperability. By 2026, the importance of cross-cloud interoperability could far exceed current pricing signals.

Stakeholders Evidence Industry Impact Analysis
Optimistic integrators (LangChain, Google ecosystem partners) Google to release with 50+ companies in 2025; native A2A endpoints in LangSmith Pushes developers toward composable systems, boosting LangChain in framework competition Short-term overestimated. Real advantages will emerge 18-24 months after SDKs mature, mainly benefiting companies with existing partner networks
Skeptics focused on trust and governance Few serious criticisms; complementary to MCP but avoid dynamic UX negotiation Lowers expectations, emphasizing IP protection over “bare interoperability” Many overlook A2A’s role in breaking silos, which could accelerate paths toward agent wallets and on-chain identities
Enterprise adopters (Microsoft, IBM) Integration with Azure/Copilot; protocol supports long-term tasks From single-agent experiments to orchestrated workflows, benefiting cloud giants True value lies in cross-vendor agent collaboration, but standard divergence may cause new fragmentation
Open-source advocates Apache license and community contributions; support across text/audio Strengthens open standards, challenges closed approaches Early signals point to anti-lock-in efforts, but large-scale benchmarking is needed to build confidence

Summary: A2A via LangChain isn’t revolutionary per se, but timing is critical. Developers and enterprises building on interoperable agent stacks are positioning themselves. Investors ignoring the “wall-breaking” effect risk misjudging structural shifts.

Importance: High
Category: Industry Trend, Developer Tools, Technical Insight

Verdict: Now is the stage for early positioning. The biggest beneficiaries are large cloud providers and enterprise software companies with extensive B2B ecosystems; it also benefits startup builders and teams already working on enterprise orchestration integrations. Pure transaction participants currently hold less advantage; long-term holders and funds betting on cross-cloud interoperability and enterprise workflows are early entrants.

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