OpenAI Wants ChatGPT to Buy Things for You. Should We Be Worried?
The company's new 'Agentic Commerce Protocol' sounds impressive, but I've seen enough automation hype cycles to know the difference between demos and deployment.
Crédit photo: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Does anyone else remember when we were told robots would do our shopping by 2010?
I do. I was at a trade show in Hanover, must've been 2007, watching a demo of an autonomous shopping cart that was supposed to follow you around the supermarket. Thing kept bumping into displays. The company went bust two years later.
So when I read that OpenAI has launched something called the "Agentic Commerce Protocol" that lets ChatGPT not just recommend products but actually buy them for you, my first instinct was skepticism. My second instinct was also skepticism.
What They're Actually Announcing
Look, here's the thing. OpenAI has rolled out a few related features in quick succession. There's shopping research, which helps you compare products with what they call "personalized buyer's guides." There's a more visual, immersive product discovery experience. And then there's the headline grabber: instant checkout, where ChatGPT can theoretically complete a purchase on your behalf.
The Agentic Commerce Protocol is their framework for connecting AI agents with merchants. They're positioning it as a way for "people, AI agents, and businesses to shop together." Which sounds nice until you think about what that actually means in practice.
I'll be honest, the demos look slick. Side-by-side product comparisons, natural language queries like "find me a coffee maker under $150 that grinds beans," that sort of thing. The ChatGPT agent they've introduced can apparently do research, make bookings, even build slideshows. Shopping is just one piece.
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