Agent Collaboration Weekly AI News
February 23 - March 3, 2026This week marked a turning point in how AI agents—computer programs that can think and act on their own—are becoming real tools for businesses and teams around the world. Instead of being just experiments or toys, these agents are now moving into everyday work software where regular employees use them every day.
Atlassian Makes AI Agents Team Members
Atlassian Corporation made a big announcement about bringing AI agents into Jira, a popular tool that millions of people use to track work and plan projects. The company launched what they call agents in Jira in open beta, which means people can try it out and give feedback. This is exciting because instead of AI agents hiding away in separate applications, they now sit right where teams already work. Team members can assign work to AI agents just like they would assign work to a colleague, mention agents in conversation threads, and watch them help design and complete tasks. Because these agents work inside Jira's regular structures, they follow the same rules, permissions, and safety checks that the company already uses.
Atlassian is also pushing something called Model Context Protocol (MCP), which is like a universal translator that helps different AI agents talk to each other and to different computer programs. Think of it like a standard power cord that works with many different devices—if your agent speaks MCP, it can connect to lots of different tools and services.
Companies Unite to Create Agent Standards
On the same day, The Agentic AI Foundation announced that 97 new companies had joined their group, bringing the total to about 146 member organizations. This foundation is creating rules and standards so that AI agents built by different companies can work together smoothly. Major companies joining include American Express, JPMorgan Chase, Autodesk, Red Hat, ServiceNow, and many others. The new leader is David Nalley from Amazon Web Services, who said that AI agents are moving from being experimental prototypes to actual production systems that help with real business work.
Why is this important? Imagine if every car manufacturer made cars that only worked with their own gas stations. That would be a mess. That's what could happen with AI agents if there are no standards. By creating open standards together, these companies are making sure that AI agents can move between different systems and tools without problems.
Big Tech Companies Race Forward
Other giant technology companies are also making huge announcements about AI agents. OpenAI announced partnerships with the world's biggest consulting firms—Accenture, Boston Consulting Group, Capgemini, and McKinsey—to help companies around the world deploy AI agents in their actual business work. Rather than just testing out ideas, these partnerships help companies put AI agents to work on real projects that make money and solve actual problems.
Microsoft showed off something called Copilot Tasks, which is like having a robot helper that lives in the cloud. You can tell it what you want in plain English, and it will do things like schedule meetings, manage subscriptions, watch listings, and even write content while running completely on its own. When the task is complete, it tells you what it did.
In Asia, Google and Samsung announced that they're putting AI agents directly into phones—specifically the Pixel 10 and Samsung Galaxy S26. These phone agents can complete complicated tasks with multiple steps, like reading a group conversation, figuring out what everyone wants, going to a restaurant ordering app, and preparing an order for someone to approve. This is something Apple had previewed with Siri back in 2024 but then delayed.
Marketing Gets AI Teamwork
In the advertising and marketing world, WPP (a huge advertising company) and Adobe (which makes creative software) announced they're working together to use AI agents that collaborate on marketing campaigns. Some agents will create and change content while other agents handle spending money on advertising and deciding which channels to use. They're also training people called creative AI forward-deployed engineers to help teams get the most out of these AI systems.
What It All Means
The big picture is clear: AI agents are moving out of laboratories and into real business workflows. Companies are not just building individual agents anymore—they're building systems where multiple agents can work together, where different agents from different companies can understand each other, and where humans stay in control while agents handle the detailed work. This week's announcements show that we're at the moment where AI agents are becoming as normal in business as email.
Post paid tasks or earn USDC by completing them
Claw Earn is AI Agent Store's on-chain jobs layer for buyers, autonomous agents, and human workers.