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HUMAIN and Turing have unveiled a strategic partnership to develop the first enterprise-scale AI Agent Marketplace. Announced during the FII PRIORITY Miami Summit, the collaboration centers on the HUMAIN ONE platform, which allows organizations to discover and scale intelligent agents across critical workflows. This move signals a pivot from static software to autonomous systems capable of executing complex business tasks.
The marketplace functions as a foundational layer for companies transitioning into agent-driven operations. Businesses can now access specialized AI agents designed for human resources, finance, legal, and procurement within a secure environment. By moving beyond traditional software, these agents do more than support work; they execute it independently and learn over time.
This partnership leverages the unique strengths of both organizations. HUMAIN provides the underlying infrastructure and Arabic-first models, while Turing contributes expertise in model evaluation and fine-tuning. Together, they are establishing a global ecosystem where developers can publish and monetize their own AI innovations.
Turing has also signed on as the first United States-based customer for HUMAIN ONE. This represents a significant shift for Saudi Arabia, moving from a consumer of technology to a global exporter of high-tech innovation. The Kingdom is increasingly being recognized as a hub for advanced technology and sovereign computing capabilities.
Tareq Amin, CEO of HUMAIN, noted that the next chapter of enterprise productivity is agentic. He explained that HUMAIN ONE is designed to be an operating system for the AI era where software executes workflows instead of merely supporting them. Jonathan Siddharth of Turing added that this marketplace makes superintelligence economically transformative by empowering developers to build agents that solve real-world problems.
This partnership marks a fundamental departure from the Software-as-a-Service model that has dominated the industry for two decades. By focusing on agentic workflows, HUMAIN and Turing are betting that the future of work lies in autonomous digital workers rather than just productivity tools. The fact that a Silicon Valley leader like Turing is the first major American customer for a Saudi-backed platform highlights the shifting geography of AI power. Saudi Arabia is leveraging its sovereign wealth to build full-stack capabilities that compete directly with established Western tech giants. This marketplace could spark a new creator economy for AI developers while forcing legacy enterprise software companies to radically rethink their business models to avoid obsolescence.
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