Once the AI Agent is truly on-chain, the first question might not be about the model, but rather about settlement. Right now, many projects are buzzing about AI Agents: whose model is stronger, whose framework is faster, and who can deploy more tools.
But if Agents really start executing tasks for people, they'll immediately hit a more fundamental issue: where do they hold their identity? What account do they use for payments? How do they settle with humans, applications, and compute nodes? What have they done, and who audits that?
This is also the focus of Auvera Chain: not just creating an 'AI conceptual chain', but placing on-chain economic entities within the same financial infrastructure.
Today's entities might be users, creators, traders, and developers; tomorrow, AI Agents will also become new executing entities.
Humans generate value on-chain, Agents execute tasks on-chain, and the underlying network handles rights confirmation, payments, settlements, and record-keeping.
If the AI Agent economy is really going to materialize, the ultimate competition might not be about who can talk the best AI, but rather who can actually facilitate real on-chain economic activities.
Content is for track observation only and does not constitute investment advice.
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