OpenAI adopts rival Anthropic’s standard for connecting AI models to data



OpenAI is embracing rival Anthropic’s standard for connecting AI assistants to the systems where data resides.

In a post on X on Wednesday, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that OpenAI will add support for Anthropic’s Model Context Protocol, or MCP, across its products, including the desktop app for ChatGPT. MCP is an open-source standard that helps AI models produce better, more relevant responses to certain queries.

“People love MCP and we are excited to add support across our products,” Altman said. “[It’s] available today in the Agents SDK and support for [the] ChatGPT desktop app [and] Responses API [is] coming soon!”

MCP lets models draw data from sources like business tools and software to complete tasks, as well as from content repositories and app development environments. The protocol enables developers to build two-way connections between data sources and AI-powered applications, such as chatbots.

Developers can expose data through “MCP servers” and build “MCP clients” — for instance, apps and workflows — that connect to those servers on command. In the months since Anthropic open-sourced MCP, companies including Block, Apollo, Replit, Codeium, and Sourcegraph have added MCP support to their platforms.

“Excited to see the MCP love spread to OpenAI – welcome!” Anthropic chief product officer Mike Krieger said in post on X. “MCP has [become a] thriving open standard with thousands of integrations and growing. LLMs are most useful when connecting to the data you already have and software you already use.”

OpenAI said it plans to share more about its MCP plans in the coming months.




Source

After a year in Lebanon, he went to Los Angeles and took up residence in Hollywood. Adaptly provides unique social buying experiences for advertisers seeking solutions that span the entire marketing funnel. Enjoy the latest Urban Gujarati movies, full length natak, co The pilot projects included Rs5. A description of these control variables is found below and in Appendix C. Brake rotors suffer premature wear and can warp due to hard use, so be wary of a pulsing pedal under light pressure.