If you think the agentic economy is a future thing on Ethereum, you haven’t been paying attention. Bots, keepers, execution services, airdrop farmers, MEV searchers - they’ve been there for years. What’s changed is that we’re starting to give them richer interfaces and more autonomy. The missing piece is not existence; it’s traceability. Most of these agents live as faceless addresses in a jungle of contracts. This is where Concordium’s ERC‑8004‑compatible Agent Registry slots in. Instead of pretending agents don’t exist, it names them, describes them, and crucially offers a way to tie their keys back to verified entities. An Ethereum agent that registers can carry a Verified by Concordium badge that tells counterparties: this isn’t just a random contract; somebody put their name, KYC, and legal accountability behind it, even if you can’t see their personal details. It is a big shift in posture from use at your own risk, good luck. You can imagine whole sectors where that badge becomes a minimum requirement. An agent that manages protocol‑owned liquidity, for example, probably shouldn’t be an unclaimed address. An agent that controls cross‑chain bridges or interacts with real‑world assets will be a lot easier to insure and regulate if there’s a registry entry saying “this is the entity responsible for this thing.” Ethereum doesn’t have to change a line of code for that; it just needs to start caring about the badge metadata. $CCD