Agent Collaboration Weekly AI News
November 17 - November 25, 2025This weekly update covers several major developments in AI agent collaboration, showing how companies worldwide are building systems where multiple intelligent agents work together like a team to solve complex problems and help businesses operate better.
What Is Agent Collaboration?
Agentic AI is quickly becoming the hottest area in artificial intelligence. Unlike older chatbots that wait for instructions, these new AI agents can make decisions, plan ahead, and even learn from their experiences. When multiple agents collaborate, they can handle jobs that are too complicated for a single agent to complete alone. Think of it like having a team of robot workers, each with special skills, all working together toward one goal.
Fetch AI Launches Multi-Agent Platform
One of the most exciting announcements this week came from Fetch AI, a company focused on making multiple agents work together smoothly. They launched ASI:One, a coordination platform that lets your personal AI orchestrate multiple verified brand agents to complete complex tasks. Imagine asking your personal AI assistant to "Plan a family trip to New York next month with flights, hotels, and two dinners." Instead of you having to visit airline websites, hotel websites, and restaurant websites separately, your AI coordinates with airline agents, hotel agents, and restaurant agents all at the same time. They all pull information from your saved preferences and present you with the best options from verified brands you trust.
Fetch AI also launched something called Agentverse, an open directory where agents from different companies can register, find each other, and work together. Unlike systems controlled by just one company, Agentverse is platform-agnostic, meaning agents built anywhere can join and work with other agents. The company points out that "ninety percent of AI agents never get used because there's no discovery layer," and Agentverse solves that problem by making agents discoverable to millions of users.
Microsoft Pushes Agent Collaboration Forward
Microsoft continues to be a major force in agent collaboration. At their Ignite conference, they introduced Agent 365, a new control environment for building, deploying, and managing AI agents across Microsoft 365, Azure, and Windows. This service provides identity, policy, and lifecycle controls, allowing agents to run within company environments with consistent oversight and security. This means companies can trust that their agents are following the right rules.
A particularly important feature is that agents in Teams channels can now work with third-party apps and agents using Model Context Protocol servers, such as GitHub, Asana, and Atlassian Jira. This is major because it means agents don't have to be locked into Microsoft's ecosystem alone. For example, a person can ask an agent in a Teams channel about problems blocking a product launch, and the agent will pull risks directly from Jira, then automatically schedule a meeting with the team. This kind of cross-company collaboration makes agents much more powerful.
Microsoft also introduced three new "IQ" products to help agents work together better. Work IQ tracks collaboration context by monitoring which documents people open, who they share them with, and who they email. Fabric IQ connects business data to business descriptions, creating concepts that AI can understand and act on. Foundry IQ provides retrieval context. Together, these products help agents understand the complete picture and work more effectively as a team.
Healthcare Gets Agent Collaboration Tools
The healthcare industry is embracing agent collaboration to solve serious problems and help doctors work more efficiently. Microsoft unveiled a healthcare agent orchestrator, a framework where multiple specialized agents work together to handle complex medical tasks. Some agents specialize in one type of job, while general reasoning agents handle broader tasks. When they collaborate, they can complete work in minutes that would normally take hours.
For example, the Atropos Evidence Agent answers clinical questions within a doctor's workflow without the doctor even needing to ask a question. During patient visits, this agent draws from patient data and surfaces real-world evidence to help the provider make better decisions quickly. Using the healthcare agent orchestrator, multiple agents work together to deliver personalized evidence to clinicians and answer complex questions in minutes without leaving the patient record. This shows how agent collaboration is moving beyond tech companies into industries that save lives.
Partnership Between Box and AWS
Box and Amazon Web Services announced a multi-year collaboration to transform enterprise content management through agent collaboration. According to Swami Sivasubramanian, Vice President of Agentic AI at AWS, "Through our Box collaboration, we're excited to help customers securely leverage their valuable business content with agentic capabilities." This partnership shows how agents can work together to help companies extract value from their sensitive business data while keeping it secure and fully protected. The collaboration includes new AI-powered content solutions and deep technical integrations.
Financial Services Embraces Agent Collaboration
In the financial services world, WorkFusion partnered with Allied Engineering Group to bring AI agents for compliance to the Middle East and Africa regions. WorkFusion offers multiple AI agents that work together, including agents named Evelyn, Tara, and Evan. They are trained with up to five years of real-world experience and coordinate together to check for fraud, reduce false alerts, and handle compliance work quickly and accurately. This partnership shows that agent collaboration is moving beyond North America and Europe to support global banking operations and help financial institutions worldwide.
The Bigger Picture
Research from MIT and the Boston Consulting Group shows that agentic AI represents a fundamental shift in how artificial intelligence works. These systems "can plan, act, and learn on their own" and increasingly "behave like autonomous teammates, capable of executing multistep processes and adapting as they go." This week's announcements prove that major companies worldwide are betting big on making agent collaboration easier, more secure, and more useful for businesses everywhere. The trend is clear: the future of AI is about agents working together, not working alone.