I believe so, sounds logical, yes. I haven’t measured it across LLMs to tell you if there is more/less overhead, confusion, hallucinations, repeated mistakes etc..
I feel like there should be a consistent protocol, an industry standard for interacting with AIs, I do see value in it, however, as you said, it doesn’t seem like there’s value in turning the entire web or everything we can think of into an mcp server.
At least not at the moment, and perhaps it will stay that way. Its logical to think that LLMs will always be more expensive to run vs a simple web or shell script for a specialised purpose.
Arguably you can drop an API or a local script for that AI to consume, but I do see benefits of having it standardised for the industry as mcp if you want something to run as an infrastructure layer that’s AI agnostic.
Yes, and that's one of the reasons I started working on this tool: to elicit desirable behavior from AIs before turn 1. AI is still non-deterministic and won't follow instructions 100% of the time, but with this tool, I intend to narrow that gap.
I'm not sure what the best course of action is here, but I fail to see the benefits to society if we were to set up legal entities for each AI agent at this stage.
I think the responsibility should lie on the shoulders of the individual/business that deployed the AI agent. For that, I can clearly see the benefits to society.