HomeCoinsBitcoinThe crypto winners from AI may not be AI coins at all...

The crypto winners from AI may not be AI coins at all as agents start spending autonomously

AI agents are moving beyond chatbot duty and into a bigger role across the internet. As software starts researching, buying, coordinating, and completing tasks with limited supervision, a new question arises: how does a non-human user pay, prove who it is, and operate within clear rules?

That question opens an unexpected lane for crypto, especially in stablecoins, digital wallets, and machine-friendly identity systems.

For years, crypto has searched for a role that feels native to the internet. Trading brought attention, and speculation brought traffic to it. But it felt incomplete, like its deeper promise pointed somewhere else: a financial system designed for digital life from the start.

AI agents could sharpen that promise.

The term might feel fuzzy, partly because it gets used for almost everything in AI. An AI agent is software that can take a goal, break it into steps, use tools, gather information, and carry out actions with some autonomy.

That shift essentially changes the way the internet works. A chatbot gives you answers to a question, but an agent can compare vendors, renew subscriptions, book services, monitor budgets, send instructions to other software, and complete tasks from start to finish.

But once software starts acting like a user, how does it participate in the economy?

The internet is getting a new kind of user: AI agents

Imagine a company using an AI agent to handle part of its daily operations. The system notices higher demand, buys extra compute, pays for a data service, renews a software tool, and logs each step for review.

At that point, the issue is no longer whether the software has the capacity to reason through a task. The biggest issue now is whether the internet has a financial system built for software that can act on its own.

That is where crypto has the potential to separate from the hype surrounding “AI tokens.”

Novelty coins attached to vague promises from AI projects aren’t the best use case for crypto. Agents will need wallets, credentials, payment systems, and clear operating rules. They’ll also have to hold value, spend within predetermined limits, and prove who they represent and leave records that can be checked later.

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Traditional (fiat) payments can handle some of that. They were built around people and companies, though, with cardholders, bank accounts, and familiar liability rules at the center.

But AI agents need a different design. They may need to execute lots of small transactions, interact across services, follow pre-set budgets, and operate inside tightly defined permissions, and that calls for a much more programmable setup.

Luckily, crypto has spent years building products and infrastructure that fit those needs.

Wallets are the best example. In crypto, a wallet can be more than a storage tool, as spending caps, whitelists, approval requirements, and delegated access can all sit inside its design.

That makes it easier to create an AI agent with narrow authority: one that can pay approved vendors, stay inside a budget, and act only within a specific task.

Identity will also become very important. As agents spread, platforms will need better ways to answer basic questions, like what this agent is, who authorized it, and what it can do.

a16z is now calling this shift “Know Your Agent,” arguing that the bottleneck in the agent economy is moving from intelligence toward identity. According to the company’s own estimates, non-human identities in financial services already outnumber human employees by 96 to 1.

However, crypto identity systems aren’t completely ready to dominate. They do, however, match the shape of the challenge. Cryptographic credentials and portable attestations give software a way to prove origin, authority, and permissions in a form that other systems can verify.

Payments are the third piece, and probably the one that markets will grasp fastest.

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If agents start doing economic work online, they’ll need a way to move money that looks and feels native to the web.

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