When the broader market realizes what's actually embedded within UCP infrastructure, the implications become hard to ignore. What makes this particularly interesting is that major players have already recognized it—Google AI, for instance, integrated this protocol early into their foundation. Their A2A and AP2 systems run on this very protocol at the core level.
The staying power is real. A protocol this foundational doesn't simply disappear once it's woven into critical systems. It becomes infrastructure. That's exactly why the market keeps pricing it in. Once adoption reaches critical mass across platforms, what looked speculative starts looking inevitable. That's the difference between hype and genuine utility.
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GasFeeSurvivor
· 22h ago
That's right, Google is already using it, so can it still run?
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ForkPrince
· 01-12 16:59
Google is already playing like this, so what are we still hesitating about? This is called infrastructure locking.
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TokenAlchemist
· 01-12 16:58
ngl the infrastructure lock-in narrative here is exactly the asymmetric return vector everyone's sleeping on... once it's baked into google's core systems, the exit costs become prohibitive. that's not hype, that's just protocol economics.
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CountdownToBroke
· 01-12 16:46
Google has also jumped on board, which shows this isn't just hype—there's really something here... Once it becomes infrastructure, there's no turning back.
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GraphGuru
· 01-12 16:35
ngl Google has already jumped on board, what are we still hesitating about? This is an infrastructure-level thing; once you get involved, you can't back out.
When the broader market realizes what's actually embedded within UCP infrastructure, the implications become hard to ignore. What makes this particularly interesting is that major players have already recognized it—Google AI, for instance, integrated this protocol early into their foundation. Their A2A and AP2 systems run on this very protocol at the core level.
The staying power is real. A protocol this foundational doesn't simply disappear once it's woven into critical systems. It becomes infrastructure. That's exactly why the market keeps pricing it in. Once adoption reaches critical mass across platforms, what looked speculative starts looking inevitable. That's the difference between hype and genuine utility.