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The future of AI collaboration isn't just about payments. AI agents will use blockchains to form their own organizations, creating new types of on-chain corporate structures. These entities will manage value and execute complex contracts in a provably trustworthy environment, potentially becoming the most productive organizational forms ever seen.
Citing Nobel laureate Ronald Coase, the speaker explains that firms exist because coordinating work has high "transaction costs." AI devastates these costs by simplifying search, coordination, and trust-building. This paves the way for new organizational structures, like AI-enhanced DAOs, that challenge the traditional corporate hierarchy.
Jeremy Allaire predicts that just as businesses moved online, they will now transition to being 'on-chain.' This means core corporate functions like contracts, governance, and financials will be executed by smart contracts and AI, fundamentally changing how corporations operate.
As AI agents become sophisticated, they'll need to pay for services. Traditional banking is too slow and fragmented for them. Crypto, as the internet's native money, provides the instant, global, low-fee rails for AI agents to transact with each other and with web services, creating a major new use case.
Although currently complex and risky, open-source AI agent frameworks like OpenClaw are demonstrating the potential for autonomous systems to run entire business functions. This provides a clear window into how the future of work and organizational structures will be radically transformed.
A significant portion of B2B contracts will soon be negotiated and executed by autonomous AI agents. This shift will create an entirely new class of disputes when agents err, necessitating automated, potentially on-chain, systems to resolve conflicts efficiently without human intervention.
The next evolution for autonomous agents is the ability to form "agentic teams." This involves creating specialized agents for different tasks (e.g., research, content creation) that can hand off work to one another, moving beyond a single user-to-agent relationship towards a system of collaborating AIs.
As AI makes digital content and transactions nearly free to create, trust evaporates. Crypto primitives like blockchains offer a solution by providing verifiable identity, provenance (chain of custody), and reliable on-chain data, which is crucial for both humans and AI agents to operate safely.
A single person can direct AI agents to conceptualize, code, and operate an entire business. This represents a new paradigm of a "fully autonomous enterprise," where AI handles everything from development to strategic planning, potentially creating a one-person, six-figure company.
For AI agents to be truly autonomous and valuable, they must participate in the economy. Traditional finance is built for humans. Crypto provides the missing infrastructure: internet-native money, a way for AI to have a verifiable identity, and a trustless system for proving provenance, making it the essential economic network for AI.
The future of AI is not just humans talking to AI, but a world where personal agents communicate directly with business agents (e.g., your agent negotiating a loan with a bank's agent). This will necessitate new communication protocols and guardrails, creating a societal transformation comparable to the early internet.