Ecommerce infrastructure: The protocol layer is the new battleground
Ecommerce infrastructure is becoming a critical competitive advantage as AI agents begin to search, compare, and purchase products on behalf of consumers. The next battle in ecommerce will not start on a product page – it will start before a customer ever sees one.
When AI agents begin to search, compare, and buy on behalf of consumers, the decisive question is no longer only which merchant has the strongest brand or the best website. It is whether that merchant can be understood, evaluated, and trusted by machines. This is why the protocol layer is becoming the new battleground of ecommerce – the invisible rulebook that determines which offers agents can find, which merchants they can trust, and which transactions they are allowed to execute.
Why protocols are becoming the operating system of ecommerce
A commerce protocol for delegated action is not just a technical format – it is a governance mechanism. It determines how a merchant becomes legible to an AI agent, and how an agent becomes recognisable and trustworthy to a merchant. It controls how user intent is translated into structured requests, which capabilities can be invoked, and how exceptions are handled when something goes wrong.
An everyday example shows why this matters. A customer asks an AI assistant to organise a last-minute dinner for four people. The agent does not only suggest recipes; it translates the request into a set of commercial actions. It identifies the missing ingredients, checks which nearby retailers can provide them, compares delivery windows and substitution rules, and prepares an order that fits the user’s budget and dietary preferences. This only works if merchants expose their product data, stock levels, delivery options and prices in a format the agent can interpret. The merchant still controls what it sells and under which conditions. But the agent increasingly decides which offer is surfaced, which retailer is considered reliable, and which transaction path becomes easiest for the customer to follow.
This is why ecommerce infrastructure design matters: it determines not only whether a transaction can be executed, but how competing offers are compared and whether consumers can understand why one merchant was chosen over another.
How ecommerce protocols are reshaping digital commerce
OpenAI’s Agentic Commerce Protocol, published in September 2025, defines structured catalogue ingestion, checkout sessions and payment handoff mechanisms that allow AI systems to move from product discovery toward transaction completion while leaving merchant operations largely intact. Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol, published in January 2026, makes clear that merchants must provide machine-readable product data, compliance attributes, checkout capabilities, and order-lifecycle endpoints to participate in agentic purchasing across Google surfaces.
The hidden significance of these specifications is that they turn commercial participation into a question of protocol conformance; a merchant that cannot communicate with these protocols risks becoming invisible to the next generation of buying systems. This is a structural shift in what it means to be commercially competitive – from having a good storefront to being discoverable and actionable at the ecommerce infrastructure level.
How merchants can prepare their ecommerce infrastructure for AI
For European merchants and payment providers, the infrastructure sovereignty becomes crucial – it defines their ability to participate in agentic commerce without becoming wholly dependent on an external ecosystem.
The practical implication is demanding but clear: Merchants need to think about ecommerce infrastructure not only in terms of their customer-facing experience, but in terms of their machine-legibility. That means publishing clean, structured, and actionable commercial data: product information, pricing logic, availability, fulfilment options, return conditions, and legal disclosures in formats that agents can read and act on.
Riverty’s commitment to open, interoperable systems is a practical answer to this challenge. In a commerce environment where protocol conformance determines visibility, the choice of payment and infrastructure partner is a structural decision; one that either preserves merchant independence or quietly erodes it.
The winners of the next era of commerce will not simply be the most visible brands or the best-designed interfaces – they will be the merchants and infrastructure providers that are accessible, trusted, and executable in an agent-driven world.
Frequently Asked Questions
In the context of agentic commerce, ecommerce infrastructure refers to the protocol layer – the technical and governance standards that determine how AI agents identify merchants, compare offers, authorise payments, and record consent.
AI shifts the competitive layer from interfaces and storefronts to the protocols beneath them. Merchants must now expose machine-readable product data, pricing logic, fulfilment terms, and compliance information to remain discoverable to agent-driven buying systems.
Interoperability determines whether merchants can participate in agentic commerce across multiple agent systems, or whether they become dependent on a single closed ecosystem. Open, interoperable protocols preserve merchant independence and competitive choice.
Machine-readable commerce means exposing commercial information – product data, pricing, availability, policies – in structured formats that AI agents can interpret and act on directly, without human intermediation.
AI will require merchants to expose product, payment, inventory, and fulfilment information in machine-readable formats so autonomous agents can evaluate and execute purchases. Ecommerce infrastructure that cannot communicate with agent systems risks becoming commercially invisible.
A commerce protocol is a set of technical standards and governance rules that allow merchants, payment providers, and AI agents to communicate and transact consistently. Protocols like OpenAI's ACP and Google’s UCP define how agents identify merchants, compare offers, authorise payments, and record consent.
Machine-readable commerce enables AI systems to discover products, compare offers, process payments, and complete transactions without requiring manual human intervention. Merchants who publish structured, actionable commercial data become accessible to agent-driven buying systems – those who don't risk being bypassed entirely.
Agentic Commerce:
The Hidden Agents whitepaper examines who is defining the protocol layer, and what European merchants and payment providers need to do before those standards are set without them.