With the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), the landscape of consumer transactions is shifting rapidly. AI agents now have the ability to search, compare, and prepare purchases on behalf of users. However, the execution of these transactions remains a hurdle due to gaps in existing infrastructure. Experian aims to address this gap with its introduction of the Agent Trust framework, designed to establish a reliable connection between consumers, their devices, and AI agents.
Various companies have been attempting to tackle the concerns surrounding AI commerce, particularly around identity and transaction security. Unlike previous initiatives, Experian’s comprehensive approach seeks to unify the ecosystem through strategic partnerships with Visa (NYSE:V), Cloudflare, and Skyfire. The focus is on creating an integrated and seamless process for verifiable transactions, a need that has been highlighted by industry experts.
What is Experian’s Agent Trust?
Central to Experian’s solution is the Human-to-Agent Binding approach, which establishes a verifiable link between consumers, their devices, and AI agents. This connection is solidified with the issuance of an Agent Trust Token, which validates identity and prevents fraud in real-time. Skyfire plays a crucial role by providing an interoperable framework capable of exchanging agent identity across platforms.
Why is Closing the Identity Gap Critical?
The disconnect between what AI agents are capable of and what they are permitted to accomplish poses a financial concern for merchants. With network-level trust signals and real-time identity verification being required, existing systems fall short in meeting these demands. Nearly half of consumers remain skeptical due to fraud and transparency issues, underscoring the importance of addressing these identity gaps.
Skyfire CEO Amir Sarhangi emphasizes the significance of this initiative, stating:
“Identity and trust are what we care the most about because at the end of the day, that’s the trust layer that needs to be created between the human, agent and the merchant.”
Despite the growing market for agentic commerce, which is slated to hit $1.7 trillion by 2030, consumer trust remains a barrier to its full realization.
Both issuer declined transactions and the inability of agents to fulfill purchase roles are major hurdles causing a significant loss in potential sales.
“We’re not trying to compete with UCP, ACP,”
Sarhangi added, highlighting their focus on the identity layer rather than competing with existing payment systems.
As technological advancements continue to influence consumer purchasing habits, addressing trust and identity in the digital transaction space becomes imperative. The frameworks being developed now are set to define future leaders in a rapidly evolving market, especially as the volume of agent-facilitated transactions increases. Establishing trust and ensuring secure transactions will likely shape Experian’s role in AI-enhanced commerce.
