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The proliferation of autonomous systems, from collaborative AI agents to decentralized decision-making units, has introduced a new dimension of machine-to-machine interaction. However, the communication between intelligent agents, especially in critical domains such as cybersecurity, defense, and finance, remains vulnerable to interception, spoofing, impersonation, and logic poisoning. This paper proposes a novel security-first communication framework designed specifically for AI-to-AI interaction. We explore foundational agent communication models, identify key security challenges in inter-agent exchange, and develop a comprehensive architecture embedding authentication, message integrity, encryption, trust verification, and agent self-defense mechanisms. A prototype implementation demonstrates how secure session establishment, encrypted payload exchange, and identity attestation can be achieved using modern cryptographic methods in a distributed agent swarm. Evaluations highlight both the threat landscape and performance implications of adding secure layers to agent dialogues. This work provides a blueprint for designing resilient AI systems that can securely reason, coordinate, and act in untrusted environments.
Panchumarthi et al. (Tue,) studied this question.