This is genuine progress and I do not want to minimize it. Containment, auditability and policy enforcement are necessary conditions for letting agents touch production networks. An agent that cannot be sandboxed cannot be trusted, and an agent whose actions cannot be audited cannot be certified. The runtime layer has to be built.
Containment is not coordination
But look carefully at what these announcements govern: individual agents, operating within a single operator's domain, executing workflows that a human has scoped in advance. This is vertical governance. It answers the question of whether an agent is allowed to perform an action. It does not answer the question that autonomous networks will actually pose at scale: when two agents are each permitted to act, and their permitted actions conflict, who decides?
Consider a scenario that is closer than most operators think. An enterprise logistics agent requests guaranteed throughput for a fleet of delivery robots. Simultaneously, a network energy agent, operating under its own perfectly valid mandate, is shutting down capacity in the same cluster to meet a sustainability target. Both agents are sandboxed. Both are auditable. Both are compliant with their policies. The runtime layer sees two well-behaved agents. The network sees a contradiction.
This is the problem I described in my previous post on network APIs. APIs were designed for developer access, not for agent-to-agent negotiation. Runtimes inherit the same blind spot. They secure the execution of each agent without providing any shared representation of the agentic plane itself.
What the meta-model requires
For agents to negotiate rather than collide, the industry needs a meta-model of the agentic plane: a topology of which agents exist and where they sit, an ontology so that an enterprise agent and a network agent mean the same thing by capacity, latency or priority, explicit authority boundaries defining what each agent may commit on behalf of its principal, shared state models so that negotiations reference the same view of the network, and audit trails that span negotiations rather than individual actions. None of the DTW announcements address this layer. They cannot, because it is not a product any single vendor can ship. It is a model the industry must agree on, the way it once agreed on network information models for OSS.
There is a familiar pattern here. The industry built firewalls before it built routing protocols for the internet's trust boundaries, and it spent two decades paying for the sequencing. We are building the firewalls of the agentic era first. The operators and standards bodies that formalize the agentic plane meta-model will define how enterprise AI and network AI transact for the next decade. The ones that stop at the runtime will discover that a network full of safely contained agents is not an autonomous network.

