I almost upped my position on OPEN last night after seeing the news about OctoClaw just launching... but I held back and only opened a small position.

Not because I doubt the on-chain automation—this direction is indeed impressive. But I kept thinking: what happens when AI agents start executing contracts on their own, managing funds, and handling sensitive data if the validation layer can't keep up with the execution layer?

What attracts me to OpenLedger is that they're not just talking about autonomous execution, but also about autonomous validation. Proof of Attribution locks every decision step on-chain, making it traceable and auditable. This is more important than people realize.

Most significant on-chain failures don't stem from dramatic hacking attacks, but from overlooked small vulnerabilities—the system trusted the wrong operation at the wrong time. If AI agents end up operating financial infrastructure, prompts for injection and adversarial manipulation will become infrastructure risks, not just "AI issues."
Maybe this architecture is still a bit premature. But at least they’re building while acknowledging the uncomfortable parts.

#OpenLedger $OPEN @OpenLedger