One Year of MCP — with David Soria Parra and AAIF Leads From OpenAI, Goose, Linux Foundation
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Latent Space

One Year of MCP — with David Soria Parra and AAIF Leads From OpenAI, Goose, Linux Foundation

Latent SpaceDec 27, 2025

AI Summary

The episode reviews the first year of the Model Context Protocol (MCP), tracing its evolution from a local experiment to a universal standard adopted by major AI firms and enterprises, and its recent transition into the Agentic AI Foundation under the Linux Foundation. Guests highlight key technical advances—remote HTTP streaming, OAuth 2.1 authentication, long‑running task primitives, and MCP Apps with iframe UI—and explain why enterprises are rapidly deploying MCP internally for secure, compliant agent workflows. They also discuss the collaborative founding of AAIF, the need for neutral governance, and a 2025 vision where MCP powers asynchronous, multi‑agent systems that discover and install tools autonomously, dramatically boosting AI productivity.

Episode Description

One year ago, Anthropic launched the Model Context Protocol (MCP)—a simple, open standard to connect AI applications to the data and tools they need. Today, MCP has exploded from a local-only experiment into the de facto protocol for agentic systems, adopted by OpenAI, Microsoft, Google, Block, and hundreds of enterprises building internal agents at scale. And now, MCP is joining the newly formed Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) under the Linux Foundation, alongside Block's Goose coding agent, with founding members spanning the biggest names in AI and cloud infrastructure.

We sat down with David Soria Parra (MCP lead, Anthropic), Nick Cooper (OpenAI), Brad Howes (Block / Goose), and Jim Zemlin (Linux Foundation CEO) to dig into the one-year journey of MCP—from Thanksgiving hacking sessions and the first remote authentication spec to long-running tasks, MCP Apps, and the rise of agent-to-agent communication—and the behind-the-scenes story of how three competitive AI labs came together to donate their protocols and agents to a neutral foundation, why enterprises are deploying MCP servers faster than anyone expected (most of it invisible, internal, and at massive scale), what it takes to design a protocol that works for both simple tool calls and complex multi-agent orchestration, how the foundation will balance taste-making (curating meaningful projects) with openness (avoiding vendor lock-in), and the 2025 vision: MCP as the communication layer for asynchronous, long-running agents that work while you sleep, discover and install their own tools, and unlock the next order of magnitude in AI productivity.

We discuss:

The one-year MCP journey: from local stdio servers to remote HTTP streaming, OAuth 2.1 authentication (and the enterprise lessons learned), long-running tasks, and MCP Apps (iframes for richer UI)

Why MCP adoption is exploding internally at enterprises: invisible, internal servers connecting agents to Slack, Linear, proprietary data, and compliance-heavy workflows (financial services, healthcare)

The authentication evolution: separating resource servers from identity providers, dynamic client registration, and why the March spec wasn't enterprise-ready (and how June fixed it)

How Anthropic dogfoods MCP: internal gateway, custom servers for Slack summaries and employee surveys, and why MCP was born from "how do I scale dev tooling faster than the company grows?"

Tasks: the new primitive for long-running, asynchronous agent operations—why tools aren't enough, how tasks enable deep research and agent-to-agent handoffs, and the design choice to make tasks a "container" (not just async tools)

MCP Apps: why iframes, how to handle styles and branding, seat selection and shopping UIs as the killer use case, and the collaboration with OpenAI to build a common standard

The registry problem: official registry vs. curated sub-registries (Smithery, GitHub), trust levels, model-driven discovery, and why MCP needs "npm for agents" (but with signatures and HIPAA/financial compliance)

The founding story of AAIF: how Anthropic, OpenAI, and Block came together (spoiler: they didn't know each other were talking to Linux Foundation), why neutrality matters, and how Jim Zemlin has never seen this much day-one inbound interest in 22 years

David Soria Parra (Anthropic / MCP)

MCP: https://modelcontextprotocol.io

https://uk.linkedin.com/in/david-soria-parra-4a78b3a

https://x.com/dsp_

Nick Cooper (OpenAI)

X: https://x.com/nicoaicopr

Brad Howes (Block / Goose)

Goose: https://github.com/block/goose

Jim Zemlin (Linux Foundation)

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zemlin/

Agentic AI Foundation

https://agenticai.foundation

Chapters

00:00:00 Introduction: MCP's First Year and Foundation Launch

00:01:17 MCP's Journey: From Launch to Industry Standard

00:02:06 Protocol Evolution: Remote Servers and Authentication

00:08:52 Enterprise Authentication and Financial Services

00:11:42 Transport Layer Challenges: HTTP Streaming and Scalability

00:15:37 Standards Development: Collaboration with Tech Giants

00:34:27 Long-Running Tasks: The Future of Async Agents

00:30:41 Discovery and Registries: Building the MCP Ecosystem

00:30:54 MCP Apps and UI: Beyond Text Interfaces

00:26:55 Internal Adoption: How Anthropic Uses MCP

00:23:15 Skills vs MCP: Complementary Not Competing

00:36:16 Community Events and Enterprise Learnings

01:03:31 Foundation Formation: Why Now and Why Together

01:07:38 Linux Foundation Partnership: Structure and Governance

01:11:13 Goose as Reference Implementation

01:17:28 Principles Over Roadmaps: Composability and Quality

01:21:02 Foundation Value Proposition: Why Contribute

01:27:49 Practical Investments: Events, Tools, and Community

01:34:58 Looking Ahead: Async Agents and Real Impact

Show Notes

One year ago, Anthropic launched the Model Context Protocol (MCP)—a simple, open standard to connect AI applications to the data and tools they need. Today, MCP has exploded from a local-only experiment into the de facto protocol for agentic systems, adopted by OpenAI, Microsoft, Google, Block, and hundreds of enterprises building internal agents at scale. And now, MCP is joining the newly formed Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) under the Linux Foundation, alongside Block's Goose coding agent, with founding members spanning the biggest names in AI and cloud infrastructure.

We sat down with David Soria Parra (MCP lead, Anthropic), Nick Cooper (OpenAI), Brad Howes (Block / Goose), and Jim Zemlin (Linux Foundation CEO) to dig into the one-year journey of MCP—from Thanksgiving hacking sessions and the first remote authentication spec to long-running tasks, MCP Apps, and the rise of agent-to-agent communication—and the behind-the-scenes story of how three competitive AI labs came together to donate their protocols and agents to a neutral foundation, why enterprises are deploying MCP servers faster than anyone expected (most of it invisible, internal, and at massive scale), what it takes to design a protocol that works for both simple tool calls and complex multi-agent orchestration, how the foundation will balance taste-making (curating meaningful projects) with openness (avoiding vendor lock-in), and the 2025 vision: MCP as the communication layer for asynchronous, long-running agents that work while you sleep, discover and install their own tools, and unlock the next order of magnitude in AI productivity.

We discuss:

  • The one-year MCP journey: from local stdio servers to remote HTTP streaming, OAuth 2.1 authentication (and the enterprise lessons learned), long-running tasks, and MCP Apps (iframes for richer UI)

  • Why MCP adoption is exploding internally at enterprises: invisible, internal servers connecting agents to Slack, Linear, proprietary data, and compliance-heavy workflows (financial services, healthcare)

  • The authentication evolution: separating resource servers from identity providers, dynamic client registration, and why the March spec wasn't enterprise-ready (and how June fixed it)

  • How Anthropic dogfoods MCP: internal gateway, custom servers for Slack summaries and employee surveys, and why MCP was born from "how do I scale dev tooling faster than the company grows?"

  • Tasks: the new primitive for long-running, asynchronous agent operations—why tools aren't enough, how tasks enable deep research and agent-to-agent handoffs, and the design choice to make tasks a "container" (not just async tools)

  • MCP Apps: why iframes, how to handle styles and branding, seat selection and shopping UIs as the killer use case, and the collaboration with OpenAI to build a common standard

  • The registry problem: official registry vs. curated sub-registries (Smithery, GitHub), trust levels, model-driven discovery, and why MCP needs "npm for agents" (but with signatures and HIPAA/financial compliance)

  • The founding story of AAIF: how Anthropic, OpenAI, and Block came together (spoiler: they didn't know each other were talking to Linux Foundation), why neutrality matters, and how Jim Zemlin has never seen this much day-one inbound interest in 22 years

David Soria Parra (Anthropic / MCP)

Nick Cooper (OpenAI)

Brad Howes (Block / Goose)

Jim Zemlin (Linux Foundation)

Agentic AI Foundation

Chapters

  • 00:00:00 Introduction: MCP's First Year and Foundation Launch

  • 00:01:17 MCP's Journey: From Launch to Industry Standard

  • 00:02:06 Protocol Evolution: Remote Servers and Authentication

  • 00:08:52 Enterprise Authentication and Financial Services

  • 00:11:42 Transport Layer Challenges: HTTP Streaming and Scalability

  • 00:15:37 Standards Development: Collaboration with Tech Giants

  • 00:34:27 Long-Running Tasks: The Future of Async Agents

  • 00:30:41 Discovery and Registries: Building the MCP Ecosystem

  • 00:30:54 MCP Apps and UI: Beyond Text Interfaces

  • 00:26:55 Internal Adoption: How Anthropic Uses MCP

  • 00:23:15 Skills vs MCP: Complementary Not Competing

  • 00:36:16 Community Events and Enterprise Learnings

  • 01:03:31 Foundation Formation: Why Now and Why Together

  • 01:07:38 Linux Foundation Partnership: Structure and Governance

  • 01:11:13 Goose as Reference Implementation

  • 01:17:28 Principles Over Roadmaps: Composability and Quality

  • 01:21:02 Foundation Value Proposition: Why Contribute

  • 01:27:49 Practical Investments: Events, Tools, and Community

  • 01:34:58 Looking Ahead: Async Agents and Real Impact

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