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AI Agents are quietly taking over the Tech Industry

AI Agents

Remember when AI just answered your questions? That’s basically ancient history now. AI agents don’t wait to be asked; they plan, use tools, and get things done on their own, and 2026 is the year this stopped being a demo and became the whole industry’s obsession.

The Protocol behind the Boom

The shift has a name behind it: the Model Context Protocol, which Anthropic open-sourced back in November 2024 as a simple way to let AI systems talk to external tools and data. It quietly became the plumbing for the entire agent economy. There are now over 10,000 public MCP servers, and it’s baked into ChatGPT, Gemini, Microsoft Copilot and VS Code.

Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 was banned, now it’s back live

In December 2025, Anthropic handed MCP over to a new Agentic AI Foundation under the Linux Foundation, co-founded alongside Block and OpenAI, with Google, Microsoft, AWS and Amazon all signing on as Platinum members. That’s the AI industry admitting agents needed shared infrastructure instead of everyone building their own walled garden.

Anthropic Open Sourced Model Context Protocols (MCP)

Numbers behind the AI Agents hype

The business numbers back this up. Gartner reckons 40 percent of enterprise apps will have task-specific agents by the end of this year, up from under 5 percent in 2025. The agent market itself is tracking from roughly $7.8 billion in 2025 towards $52 billion by 2030. Salesforce’s Agentforce alone has pulled in $800 million in annual recurring revenue with over 18,500 customers signed up.

Salesforce's Agentforce alone has pulled in $800 million

Part nobody puts in the press release

Gartner also predicts more than 40 percent of these agentic AI projects will be scrapped by 2027. Companies are racing to bolt agents onto everything, but reliability, security, and actually proving the return on investment are still catching up. Tool poisoning attacks through dodgy MCP servers are already a real threat, and Meta had an internal agent error this year that briefly exposed sensitive data.

Meta

Who actually wins this

So yes, agents are everywhere, and the money is real, but this is still very much a build-the-plane-while-flying-it situation. I reckon the winners in 2026 won’t be whoever ships the flashiest agent demo; they’ll be whoever survives the inevitable cleanup once the hype settles.


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