Kite Signals a Shift From “Smart” Blockchains to Accountable Ones

Kite doesn’t feel like a futuristic gamble. It feels like a response to something already underway. As AI agents begin to act economically, the real problem is no longer how powerful they can be, but how accountable they should be. Kite is built around that question.

As an EVM-compatible Layer 1, Kite stays familiar for developers while focusing on a different reality: non-human actors that transact frequently, autonomously, and without constant oversight. Its design treats this behavior as a core constraint, not an edge case.

The standout feature is its three-layer identity system—users, agents, and sessions—which introduces clear delegation and control. Permissions can be scoped, limited, and revoked without collapsing everything into a single wallet. Trust isn’t removed; it’s defined and enforceable.

Kite’s ambitions are intentionally narrow. The focus is on real-time payments between AI agents and digital services like APIs, compute, and data. Token utility and governance are phased in gradually, allowing real usage to shape the system before complexity is added.

Rather than trying to solve everything at once, Kite addresses a growing gap: enabling autonomous agents to transact with limits, identity, and responsibility built in. It may not be loud or flashy, but its emphasis on accountability over abstraction could mark a meaningful shift in blockchain design.

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