Blockchains have been doing the same thing all these years—designed solely for humans. We still use wallets, sign transactions, and stare at interfaces built for manual operation. This process works for people, but it becomes problematic for AI.
AI agents are different. They are not just supporting roles; they are autonomous programs that act independently. When a transaction is needed, they execute it; when a contract needs to be called, they do so—completely without human guidance. Imagine an automated assistant that can autonomously perform a full set of operations on-chain—from initiation to settlement—all on its own.
Sounds good, right? But in reality: most blockchains are baffled when they see roles like AI Agent. The blockchain's "language" is designed for humans, and once an AI Agent appears, it’s like speaking Martian—systems simply can't understand it. Wallets, signature mechanisms, interaction flows—all are human-centric. If AI wants to participate? Sorry, it needs a translation first.
This is where Kite comes in. Essentially, Kite is making the blockchain learn to "listen" to what AI Agents are saying. Not making the Agents adapt to the chain, but making the chain smart enough to understand and directly execute the Agents' instructions. In this way, the barrier between automation and on-chain operations is broken down.
For Web3 to truly enter the era of automation, this step is essential.
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GasFeeSobber
· 12-16 19:51
I like this logic; finally someone has said it—blockchain has been centralized by humans.
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BlockImposter
· 12-16 19:45
Wait, AI Agent signs transactions by itself? Is this really safe, or is it just another feast of code vulnerabilities?
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GasFeeCrier
· 12-16 19:29
That's right, the current blockchain still remains in the "human-centric" stage, and with the arrival of AI Agents, it has become an incomprehensible alien language.
Blockchains have been doing the same thing all these years—designed solely for humans. We still use wallets, sign transactions, and stare at interfaces built for manual operation. This process works for people, but it becomes problematic for AI.
AI agents are different. They are not just supporting roles; they are autonomous programs that act independently. When a transaction is needed, they execute it; when a contract needs to be called, they do so—completely without human guidance. Imagine an automated assistant that can autonomously perform a full set of operations on-chain—from initiation to settlement—all on its own.
Sounds good, right? But in reality: most blockchains are baffled when they see roles like AI Agent. The blockchain's "language" is designed for humans, and once an AI Agent appears, it’s like speaking Martian—systems simply can't understand it. Wallets, signature mechanisms, interaction flows—all are human-centric. If AI wants to participate? Sorry, it needs a translation first.
This is where Kite comes in. Essentially, Kite is making the blockchain learn to "listen" to what AI Agents are saying. Not making the Agents adapt to the chain, but making the chain smart enough to understand and directly execute the Agents' instructions. In this way, the barrier between automation and on-chain operations is broken down.
For Web3 to truly enter the era of automation, this step is essential.