Arbitration body and Integra Ledger launch a legal standard for AI agent commerce
The American Arbitration Association and Integra Ledger have launched the Legal Context Protocol, an open standard that attaches legal terms, consent, and dispute resolution to AI agent transactions, backed by Google, IBM, Circle, and major blockchain networks.

A Legal Layer for the Agentic Economy
The American Arbitration Association (@ADRorg) and Integra Ledger launched the Legal Context Protocol (LCP) on June 24, an open standard designed to bring legal accountability to transactions carried out by autonomous AI agents. LCP makes legal terms, consent, and dispute resolution discoverable and verifiable when AI agents transact on behalf of people and organizations.
The move addresses a gap that has grown more pressing as AI agents take on greater commercial roles. AI agents are already negotiating services, executing procurement, and settling payments autonomously, and Gartner projects that by 2028, 90% of B2B purchases will be intermediated by AI agents, channeling more than $15 trillion through automated exchanges.
David Fisher, CEO of Integra Ledger, framed the problem plainly. "Payment infrastructure is actively being built for AI agents. The legal layer, what was agreed, under what terms, and how disputes will be resolved, is not," he said. "LCP provides the essential legal layer, built as an open standard that can be added to all payment rails and protocols."
A Broad Founding Coalition
Joining the AAA and Integra Ledger as founding contributors are Google, IBM, Circle, Wayfair, Stellar Development Foundation, Ava Labs, UiPath, Cardano, Hedera, Crossmint, Pinata, Aptos Foundation, Baselayer, Trinsic, First Person Cooperative, Sei Labs, and Mysten Labs, the original contributor to Sui.
LCP does not move money itself. It records the terms under which a transaction took place, which law governs it, and what remedies are available if a dispute arises, making that information discoverable and cryptographically verifiable so counterpart agents and human auditors can confirm the legal context of an automated deal.
LCP is intended to work alongside existing payment and identity standards rather than replace them. The protocol does not require blockchain technology and is built to interoperate with emerging agent payment stacks, including protocols such as x402 and the Machine Payments Protocol.
The Legal Context Protocol is stewarded by Integra Ledger and the American Arbitration Association. The specification, reference implementation, and companion white paper are available at legalcontextprotocol.org.
Sources
AAA and Industry Leaders Launch Legal Protocol for Agentic Commerce (PR Newswire)
AAA Official Press Release (adr.org)
AI Is Getting a Legal Layer as Agentic Commerce Accelerates (CoinTelegraph)
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Crypto RichRich has been researching cryptocurrency and blockchain technology for eight years and has served as a senior analyst at BSCN since its founding in 2020. He focuses on fundamental analysis of early-stage crypto projects and tokens and has published in-depth research reports on over 200 emerging protocols. Rich also writes about broader technology and scientific trends and maintains active involvement in the crypto community through X/Twitter Spaces, and leading industry events.












