The Linux Foundation has launched the Agentic AI Foundation to foster open collaboration on autonomous AI systems. Major tech companies, including Anthropic, OpenAI, and Block, contributed key open-source projects to promote interoperability and prevent vendor lock-in. The initiative aims to create neutral standards for AI agents that can make decisions and execute tasks independently.
The Linux Foundation announced the formation of the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) on December 10, 2025, bringing together industry leaders to advance agentic AI technologies. Agentic AI refers to autonomous systems capable of independent decision-making and task coordination, marking a shift from conversational assistants to more complex executors.
The foundation debuted with three significant open-source contributions. Anthropic donated its Model Context Protocol (MCP), released in November 2024, which enables AI models to connect with external tools, data sources, and applications. MCP has already been adopted by platforms including Claude, Cursor, Microsoft Copilot, Gemini, VS Code, and ChatGPT. Block contributed Goose, a local-first framework for building AI agents that integrates language models with extensible tools and MCP. Goose powers thousands of engineers at Square and Cash App. OpenAI provided AGENTS.md, a markdown-based standard offering consistent project-specific guidance for AI coding agents across repositories.
AAIF's platinum members, each committing $350,000, include Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, Block, Bloomberg, Cloudflare, Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI. The foundation also has 18 gold members at $200,000 each, 23 silver members at $10,000, and a free associate tier for non-profits, academics, and governments. Additional participants include Docker, Hugging Face, IBM, JetBrains, Oracle, Snowflake, SUSE, and Kubermatic.
Jim Zemlin, executive director of the Linux Foundation, emphasized the need for open governance: "By bringing these projects together under the AAIF, we are now able to coordinate interoperability, safety patterns, and best practices specifically for AI agents." He added that no one wants a future where a handful of companies own the entire agent stack. Brad Axen from Block noted that open frameworks like Goose can compete with proprietary systems at scale. Anthropic affirmed it will continue investing in MCP to keep it neutral, open, and community-driven.
The projects will transition to community governance on the foundation's GitHub, aiming to ensure transparent development and widespread adoption without fragmentation.