Kite: When AI begins to execute decisions on its own, a quiet shift in underlying logic is happening on the blockchain.
We have always understood blockchain from a 'human' perspective.
Wallets belong to humans, transactions are initiated by humans, and risks are borne by humans.
But reality is changing—AI is no longer just providing suggestions; it is starting to execute directly.
The question arises:
When AI runs strategies, schedules resources, and calls services on its own,
what identity does it use? Who settles? How is it constrained?
Kite provides a straightforward answer.
Kite is not about creating AI applications; it is about building an 'economic system' for AI.
On Kite, AI Agents have native on-chain identities, independent wallets, and permission controls.
They can automatically execute tasks, automatically pay fees, and automatically collaborate.
In a nutshell:
👉 For the first time, AI can 'run business' on the chain by itself.
This is not about efficiency optimization, but rather a change in the way of participation.
Why is this point often underestimated?
Because most on-chain activities still originate from humans.
But once AI begins to participate at scale, transaction frequency and collaboration complexity will rise exponentially.
At that time, the traditional human wallet model will become a bottleneck.
Kite's position resembles more of infrastructure rather than a hot concept.
It does not bet on whether a specific application will explode,
but rather on a trend:
👉 The important participants on the chain in the future will not just be humans.
As long as this trend holds,
the economic layer designed for AI will definitely have demand.
Why is it worth paying attention to now?
Because we are still in the 'understanding phase,' not at the emotional peak.
Such projects often complete their first round of pricing while you are still contemplating them.
True FOMO usually comes from:
realizing that it has already been needed.

