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Infoblox, GoDaddy back open standards for AI agent discovery By Investing.com
SANTA CLARA, Calif. and TEMPE, Ariz. - Infoblox and GoDaddy Inc. (NYSE:GDDY) announced today their support for complementary open standards designed to help AI agents identify and verify one another across the internet. Infoblox is advancing DNS for AI Discovery (DNS-AID), an approach for agent discovery built on existing Domain Name System infrastructure. GoDaddy is helping develop Agent Name Service (ANS), an open standard focused on agent identity, naming and verification using DNS and public key infrastructure.The strategic initiative comes as GoDaddy shares trade at $85.08, down 55% over the past year, though InvestingPro analysis suggests the stock appears undervalued at current levels. According to InvestingPro Tips, the company is trading at a low P/E ratio relative to near-term earnings growth, with a PEG ratio of just 0.6. Investors can access comprehensive analysis through GoDaddy's Pro Research Report, one of 1,400+ available reports that transform complex data into actionable intelligence, along with 11 additional ProTips. Both efforts are being developed in community standards bodies with the goal of enabling independent implementations and avoiding single-vendor control, according to a press release statement. DNS-AID is an open standard advancing as an Internet Engineering Task Force draft that defines how AI agents can publish discoverable metadata using existing DNS record types, including Service Bindings, DNS-SD service discovery, Domain Name System Security Extensions, and DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities. The standard addresses how agents and systems find the metadata needed to evaluate and connect with one another. Agent Name Service is an open standard for AI agent identity, naming and verification, built on DNS and PKI. GoDaddy is a co-author of the ANS IETF draft. The standard allows agent operators to use domain names they already own without requiring a new registry or proprietary naming system. "Agents will only reach their full potential on the open web if people and systems can verify who they are interacting with," said Jared Sine, chief strategy and legal officer at GoDaddy. The companies stated that ANS focuses on agent identity while DNS-AID focuses on agent discovery. Both efforts share a DNS and PKI foundation and are being developed to function alongside each other. The companies called on cloud providers, agent platform vendors, registrars, security companies and standards organizations to join the open standards work. In other recent news, GoDaddy Inc. reported its first-quarter 2026 earnings, surpassing expectations with an earnings per share (EPS) of $1.60, compared to the forecasted $1.52. Revenue for the quarter was in line with predictions, totaling $1.27 billion. Additionally, the company launched Airo for WordPress, an AI-powered tool designed to assist users in building and managing WordPress websites through a conversational chat interface. This new product combines AI-assisted creation and editing with managed infrastructure and support for the WordPress plugin ecosystem. Raymond James reiterated a Strong Buy rating for GoDaddy, maintaining a $100 price target, and emphasized artificial intelligence as a significant growth opportunity for the company. The firm's AI-powered Websites + Marketing product exceeded expectations, contributing to a 200 basis point margin expansion. Meanwhile, UBS assumed coverage of GoDaddy with a Neutral rating and a price target of $100, down from $105. The firm highlighted GoDaddy's strong brand recognition and customer retention rates above 85%, driven by its domain registrar business and focus on high-value customers. This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.
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Infoblox And GoDaddy Support Open Standards For AI Agent Discovery, Identity And Verification
AUCKLAND, May 15, 2026 -- Infoblox, a leader in hybrid, multi-cloud networking and preemptive security, and GoDaddy Inc. (NYSE: GDDY), a global leader in domain registration and internet infrastructure, today announced support for complementary open standards designed to help AI agents identify, discover and verify one another across the open web. Infoblox is advancing DNS for AI Discovery (DNS-AID), an open, interoperable approach for agent discovery built on existing Domain Name System (DNS) infrastructure. GoDaddy is helping develop Agent Name Service (ANS), an open standard focused on agent identity, naming and verification using DNS and public key infrastructure (PKI). Both efforts are complementary and are being developed in community standards bodies with the explicit goal of enabling independent implementations and avoiding single- or concentrated-vendor control. The companies share a belief that no single or small group of vendors, registries or platforms should control how AI agents are named, discovered or verified. As agents begin to act across websites, applications and enterprise environments, open standards will be essential to help people and systems know which agents they are interacting with and whether those agents are verified. "Agents will only reach their full potential on the open web if people and systems can verify who they are interacting with," said Jared Sine, chief strategy and legal officer at GoDaddy. "Adopters of the Agent Name Service open standard leverages the only infrastructure that exists today that operates at the scale and speed of the global internet - Domain Name Service. We support Infoblox's work on DNS-AID and believe open standards for identity, discovery and verification will be critical as agents become part of everyday digital experiences." "The lesson we learned from the 1970s-1980s is simple: no single entity could or should run the phonebook of the internet for everyone," said Wei Chen, CLO, EVP, Regulatory Strategy at Infoblox. "DNS replaced it, not with another centralised list, but with an open, federated protocol that anyone could participate in. Forty years later, DNS remains the gold standard for digital trust and a scalable foundation where agents, Model Context Protocols, services and endpoints can be discovered and trusted through the same architecture that already powers the global economy." DNS-AID is an open standard, currently advancing as an Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) draft and open-source software, that defines how AI agents can publish discoverable metadata using existing DNS record types, including RFC 9460 Service Bindings (SVCB), DNS-SD service discovery, Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC), and DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE). DNS-AID is not owned by any company; it is a community standard that any organization, platform, registry or agent framework can implement. By advancing DNS-AID, Infoblox is helping establish a standards-based discovery layer for agents. GoDaddy supports the goal of open, DNS-based agent discovery and believes DNS-AID complements ANS by addressing a related but distinct need: helping agents and systems find the metadata needed to evaluate and connect with one another. Agent Name Service is an open standard and implementation for AI agent identity, naming and verification, built on DNS and PKI. GoDaddy is a co-author of the ANS IETF draft and a significant contributor to its open-source implementation. ANS is designed to let agent operators use domain names they already own -- without requiring a new registry or proprietary naming system. This helps make agents identifiable and addressable through the same established internet infrastructure that already supports websites and email. ANS is anchored on agent identity: giving agents unique names and the cryptographic proof to back them. DNS-AID focuses on agent discovery: defining how agents' capabilities and endpoints are published in DNS so other systems can find them. The two efforts share a DNS and PKI foundation and are being developed to fit alongside each other in DNS as complementary parts of an open agentic internet. Put simply: ANS answers who an agent is, and DNS-AID helps others find what it can do. Infoblox and GoDaddy believe agent discovery and identity should be open and interoperable, not tied to proprietary protocols or closed registries. Agent deployers should retain control over their agents' identity, metadata, discoverability and policies, and trust decisions should be based on open, auditable, cryptographically verifiable signals rather than proprietary reputation scores controlled by a single vendor. DNS is already globally deployed, federated, extensible and supported by mature operational and security practices. Building agent identity and discovery on DNS means inheriting decades of operational experience, caching infrastructure, anycast resilience, governance process and an installed base that reaches every device on the internet. SVCB records provide an extensible record format that can support agent capabilities, endpoints and protocols. Infoblox and GoDaddy recognise that it will take the industry to come together to define the future of the agentic internet alone. "We are calling on cloud providers, agent platform vendors, registrars, security companies and standards organisations to join us in open standards work," said Jared Sine and Wei Chen. "We believe AI agents should be discovered and verified through open infrastructure that is fully federated and distributed." GoDaddy, the world's largest domain name registrar, helps millions of entrepreneurs globally start, grow and scale their businesses. People come to GoDaddy to name their idea, build a website and logo, sell their products and services, and accept payments. GoDaddy Airo®, the company's AI-powered experience, makes growing a small business faster and easier by helping them to get their idea online in minutes, drive traffic and boost sales. GoDaddy's expert guides are available 24/7 to provide assistance. Infoblox unites networking, security and cloud with a protective DDI platform that delivers enterprise resilience and agility. Trusted by over 6,000 customers, including the majority of Fortune 100 companies as well as emerging innovators, we seamlessly integrate, secure and automate critical network services so businesses can move fast without compromise.
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Infoblox and GoDaddy announced support for complementary open standards designed to help AI agents identify and verify one another across the internet. Infoblox is advancing DNS for AI Discovery (DNS-AID) while GoDaddy develops Agent Name Service (ANS), both built on existing DNS infrastructure to enable interoperability and prevent single-vendor control.
Infoblox and GoDaddy have announced support for complementary open standards designed to address a critical challenge as AI agents proliferate across the internet: how these autonomous systems identify, discover, and verify one another. The initiative centers on two distinct but interconnected protocols—DNS for AI Discovery (DNS-AID) and Agent Name Service (ANS)—both built on existing DNS infrastructure and public key infrastructure to ensure no single vendor controls the emerging agentic internet
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.The companies share a conviction that as agents begin acting across websites, applications, and enterprise environments, the underlying systems for AI agent identity and verification must remain open and interoperable. "Agents will only reach their full potential on the open web if people and systems can verify who they are interacting with," said Jared Sine, chief strategy and legal officer at GoDaddy
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. Both efforts are being developed in community standards bodies with the explicit goal of enabling independent implementations and avoiding single-vendor control1
.Infoblox is advancing DNS-AID, an open standard currently progressing as an Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) draft that defines how AI agents can publish discoverable metadata using existing DNS record types. The protocol leverages RFC 9460 Service Bindings (SVCB), DNS-SD service discovery, Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC), and DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE)
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. DNS-AID is not owned by any company and represents a community standard that any organization, platform, registry, or agent framework can implement2
.Wei Chen, CLO and EVP of Regulatory Strategy at Infoblox, drew parallels to internet history: "The lesson we learned from the 1970s-1980s is simple: no single entity could or should run the phonebook of the internet for everyone. DNS replaced it, not with another centralised list, but with an open, federated protocol that anyone could participate in"
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. The standard addresses how agents and systems find the metadata needed to evaluate and connect with one another, essentially helping others discover what an agent can do1
.GoDaddy is helping develop ANS, an open standard for AI agent identity, naming, and verification using DNS and public key infrastructure. As a co-author of the ANS IETF draft and significant contributor to its open-source implementation, GoDaddy is positioning the standard to let agent operators use domain names they already own without requiring a new registry or proprietary naming system
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. This approach makes agents identifiable and addressable through the same established internet infrastructure that already supports websites and email2
.ANS is anchored on agent identity, giving agents unique names and cryptographic proof to back them, while DNS-AID focuses on AI agent discovery by defining how agents' capabilities and endpoints are published in DNS. The two efforts share a DNS and PKI foundation and are being developed to fit alongside each other as complementary parts of an open agentic internet
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. Put simply: ANS answers who an agent is, while DNS-AID helps others find what it can do2
.Related Stories
Both companies believe agent discovery and identity should be open and interoperable, not tied to proprietary protocols or closed registries. Agent deployers should retain control over their agents' identity, metadata, discoverability, and policies, with trust decisions based on open, auditable, cryptographically verifiable signals rather than proprietary reputation scores controlled by a single vendor
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. Building on DNS means inheriting decades of operational experience, caching infrastructure, anycast resilience, and governance processes2
.The companies called on cloud providers, agent platform vendors, registrars, security companies, and standards organizations to join the open standards work
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. This collaborative approach aims to prevent the fragmentation that could occur if multiple competing, proprietary systems emerge for agent identification and discovery. As AI agents become part of everyday digital experiences, these foundational standards will determine whether the agentic web remains open or becomes controlled by a small number of platforms.Summarized by
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