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#链上支付 I recently read an article and my mind is a bit overwhelmed🤔 It said that AI agents can now spend money on their own, but the question is—who is responsible?
Just like when I first used a wallet to transfer money, I was nervous and afraid of sending it to the wrong address and never getting it back. Now that AI agents can trade autonomously, if they make a "bad decision" or are hacked, funds could disappear without a trace. Even more absurd is that there is no unified standard for verifying "who" these agents are, nor is there a credit score system for them. How can merchants dare to do business with strangers' machines?
I think of it like building a house: the pipelines are all laid out (payment technology is fine), but there are no access controls, no surveillance, and no way to hold anyone accountable if something goes wrong. The article mentions identity verification, fraud detection, and dispute resolution mechanisms—these sound like safety features for agent transactions.
But from another perspective, could this be an opportunity? If someone can establish reliable identity verification for agents or design effective dispute resolution mechanisms, it could lay a trust foundation for the entire ecosystem. Compared to large companies limited by existing business models, startups might be able to fill these gaps more quickly.
I'm still a bit anxious about the speed of development; it feels like the infrastructure can't keep up with the applications😅 but I'm also looking forward to seeing how these issues are addressed.