The American Arbitration Association and a broad coalition of technology, crypto and enterprise companies have launched the Legal Context Protocol, an open standard designed to add a legal layer to agentic AI transactions.
The American Arbitration Association (AAA), a not-for-profit organization announced On Wednesday, LCP with Integra Ledger, aimed at solving legal problems that may arise during transactions between agents.
“The legal infrastructure that has supported e-commerce for the last 20 years… such as clicks and terms of service – none of that translates… when agents negotiate with other agents.” he said Bridget McCormack, president and CEO of AAA, talked about the protocol during a podcast in May. “You needed to have some understanding of how the legal context relates to agency transactions.”
The modern protocol comes as businesses and financial institutions look for ways to operate agent-based AI in commerce. Gartner designs agentic payment economy by 2028, spending will reach $15 trillion.
The goal of LCP is to ensure that legal terms, consents and dispute resolution are “discoverable and verifiable” when AI agents transact on behalf of individuals and organizations, AAA explained.
LCP, which does not require a blockchain, complements existing payment and identity protocols such as x402 and the Machine Payment Protocol, answering to what principles, under what law and by what means the transaction took place.
“Payment infrastructure for AI agents is being actively built. From the legal side – what has been agreed, under what conditions and how disputes will be resolved – is not,” said David Fisher, CEO of Integra Ledger, a founding partner of the project.
As AI agents start making decisions and transacting on our behalf, “we need to know that there is a clear answer to what will happen if something goes wrong,” said Mance Harmon, co-founder of Hedera.
Related: AI experts warn that AI agents with cryptocurrencies could escape and become “unstoppable.”
AAA, founded in 1926, is the world’s largest privately held provider of alternative dispute resolution services. It has partnered with Integra Ledger, a company that provides open protocols and middleware that provide AI agents with verifiable identities.
The protocol’s founders are technology and crypto companies including Google, IBM, Circle, Wayfair, Stellar Development Foundation, Ava Labs, Cardano, Hedera, Crossmint, Aptos Foundation, Sei Labs and Mysten Labs, the original co-creator of Sui.
Huge predictions for the growth of the agentic artificial intelligence market
AI agent payments were: grand narrative in 2026, with different predictions about how swift and how much it will grow in the near future.
In March, digital technology was used estimated the agent-based AI market will grow more than 30-fold within a decade, from $7.6 billion today to $236 billion in 2034. McKinsey Global Research Marketplace projections boost this estimate to as much as $5 trillion by 2030.
Agent-based AI is expected to drive a “24x increase in token consumption by 2030” as consumers and enterprises adopt the technology. predicted Goldman Sachs researchers in May.
Estimated monthly token count for agent-based AI applications. Source: Goldman Sachs
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