Sometimes it feels like our software is already ahead of our systems. Agents can decide, plan, schedule and trigger actions on their own… then everything stops the moment money is involved because a human still has to click “approve”.

That gap is exactly where I see @KITE AI stepping in.

KITE isn’t trying to be “another L1 for everything”. It’s building rails for a very specific future: one where autonomous agents can pay for services, settle micro-transactions, and coordinate with each other without borrowing your wallet keys or having unlimited access to your funds.

What I really like is the way $KITE breaks identity into layers. There’s you as the owner, there’s the agent that acts on your behalf, and there’s the session that defines how long and how far that agent is allowed to go. Spend caps, time windows, allowed counterparties – all of that lives at the protocol level, not in some messy off-chain spreadsheet.

So an agent can pay an API per minute, top up a model, or subscribe to a data feed automatically – but only inside the rules you defined. If something looks off or the session expires, the spending pipe closes. No “oops, the bot had full access to my wallet” moment.

For me, that’s the interesting part about KITE: it doesn’t ask us to blindly trust AI with money. It gives us a way to shape how software touches value – with guardrails, receipts, and clear accountability baked in from day one.

#KITE