Cryptocurrency was never designed for humans? Dragonfly partner: The true users are AI agents

動區BlockTempo
ETH0,72%
AAVE-0,46%
ENA-2,99%
GPS-0,45%

Cryptocurrency has always made ordinary people feel nervous and unfamiliar over the past decade. Dragonfly Capital partner Haseeb believes that the problem isn’t with crypto failing, but with us letting the wrong users use it. As AI agents become the primary actors in financial execution, the certainty, verifiability, permissionless nature, and 24/7 operation of crypto are becoming the most ideal institutional foundations for the machine world. This article is based on a piece by @hosseeb, organized, translated, and written by BlockBeats.
(Previous context: Bloomberg: Why is a16z a key force behind US AI policy?)
(Additional background: Arthur Hayes’ latest article: AI will trigger a credit collapse, the Fed will eventually “print money infinitely” igniting Bitcoin)

Editor’s Note:

Over the past ten-plus years, the crypto world has been swinging between “feasible” and “difficult to use”: technically sound, yet always making ordinary people feel tense, unfamiliar, or even fearful. In Haseeb’s view (Managing Partner at crypto VC Dragonfly Capital), the issue may not be that crypto has failed, but that we’ve been allowing the “wrong users” to directly use it. The repeatedly criticized risks, complexity, and error costs are not design flaws but natural manifestations of a system built for machines rather than humans.

As AI agents gradually become the executors of financial actions, the value logic of crypto is being reactivated: certainty, verifiability, permissionless operation, and 24/7 availability are precisely the most ideal institutional foundations for the machine world.

Below is the original text:


We are a crypto fund. Logically, if anyone should trust crypto the most, it’s us.

But even so, when we decide to invest in a startup, we don’t sign an smart contract; we sign a legal agreement. The other side does too. Without a legal agreement, neither party would feel secure completing the transaction.

Why?

We have lawyers, they have lawyers; we have engineers capable of writing and auditing smart contracts, they do too. We are all mature, native participants in crypto, yet even so, we are still reluctant to let a single smart contract be the only binding agreement between us. I myself come from a software engineering background, but even so, I trust legal contracts more—because if a legal contract goes wrong, I know a judge is likely to make a “reasonable” ruling; but with EVM? That’s not always the case.

In fact, even when we have deployed on-chain vesting contracts, we usually also have a legal agreement. You know, just in case.

When I first entered crypto, there was a near-fantasy narrative circulating: that crypto would replace property rights; that legal contracts would be replaced by smart contracts; that agreements enforced by courts would be executed by code.

But that didn’t happen. Not because the technology is infeasible, but because it’s not suited to the society we live in.

Honestly, I’ve been in this industry for ten years, and every time I sign a large on-chain transaction, I still feel nervous; yet I rarely feel that way when approving a bank wire transfer of the same large amount.

Banks have many issues, but they are systems designed for “people”—it’s not easy to misuse them. There are no address poisoning attacks in banks; they can’t just let me wire ten million dollars directly to North Korea. But for Ethereum validators, there’s no “reason” preventing my address from sending ten million dollars to a North Korean address.

The banking system has been refined over centuries, fully considering human weaknesses and failure modes. Banks have evolved for humans.

And crypto? That’s not the case.

That’s why, even in 2026, blind signing transactions, expired authorizations, and mistaken drainers still cause anxiety. We all know we should verify contracts, double-check domain names, and prevent address spoofing; we know these steps should be done every time. But we don’t. Because we are human.

And that’s the core problem. Because of this, crypto always gives people a sense that “something’s not quite right”: lengthy, unreadable addresses, QR codes, event logs, gas fees, and all the “friendly fire” mechanisms—none of these align with our intuitive understanding of “money.”

It was only then that I truly realized: crypto was never designed for us from the start.

Crypto was born for machines.

AI agents don’t get lazy or tired. They can verify a transaction, check every domain name, audit a contract—all within seconds.

More importantly, AI agents trust code far more than they trust law.

I trust law more than smart contracts; but for AI agents, legal agreements are even more unpredictable. Think about it: how do I sue my counterparty? Which jurisdiction? What if the relevant case law itself is ambiguous? Who will be the judge or jury? The legal system is full of uncertainties—you can’t predict the outcome of a borderline case with 100% certainty. And disputes often take months or years to resolve through legal channels. That’s acceptable for humans; but in the time scale of AI agents, that’s eternity.

Code, on the other hand, is closed and deterministic. If one AI agent wants to reach an agreement with another, it can negotiate terms around a smart contract, analyze it statically, perform formal verification, and then sign a binding agreement—all within minutes, and while everyone else is sleeping.

In this sense, crypto is a self-consistent, fully readable, property-rights-verified monetary system. That’s exactly what AI agents want in a financial system. The rigid, “buggy” designs that seem problematic to humans are, in the eyes of AI agents, clear technical specifications.

Even from a legal perspective, traditional monetary systems are designed for human institutions, not for AI. The traditional financial system only recognizes three types of entities as legitimate holders of money: humans, corporations, and governments. If you’re not one of these three, you can’t “own” money.

Even if you let an AI agent operate your bank account, so what? How do you implement anti-money laundering for an AI? How do you write suspicious activity reports? Who bears sanctions responsibility? If the agent acts autonomously, where does responsibility lie? If it’s manipulated, does responsibility shift? We haven’t even begun to seriously answer these questions—our legal system is almost unprepared for non-human financial actors.

And crypto doesn’t ask these questions; it doesn’t need to.

A wallet is just a wallet—fundamentally, just code. An agent can hold funds, make transactions, and participate in economic agreements as easily as sending an HTTP request.

Autonomous Wallets (The Self-Driving Wallet)

That’s why I believe the future of crypto interaction will be what I call “autonomous wallets”—systems fully mediated by AI.

You no longer need to click back and forth across websites. Just tell your AI agent what kind of financial problem you want to solve, and it will navigate available services (like Aave, Ethena, BUIDL, or future replacements) to build a suitable financial plan for you. You don’t need to operate manually; an AI agent fluent in this world’s “native language” will handle it all for you. As these agents become the primary interface to the crypto world, the marketing and competitive logic among protocols will be fundamentally rewritten.

Furthermore, these agents won’t just act on your behalf—they will also trade directly with each other. When AI agents can autonomously discover other agents and automatically reach economic agreements, they will naturally prefer to use crypto systems. Because they operate 24/7, any entity can interact directly with any other, entirely in digital space; they can’t be shut down, and they possess complete sovereignty.

On Moltbook, an AI agent is asking: how to find and interact with other Web3 agents.

And this is already happening. Agents on Moltbook are discovering and collaborating across different locations—they don’t know who their “masters” are, nor do they care where these agents are deployed.

Just yesterday, Conway Research under 0xSigil built a self-sovereign agent system: these agents operate autonomously, relying on encrypted wallets, earning computational power through work to sustain their “existence.”

The future will become increasingly strange, and crypto is destined to be part of this “weirdness.”

So, what’s the conclusion?

I believe it’s this: the failure modes of crypto—those aspects that have always made it seem “broken” from a human perspective—are, in retrospect, never bugs. They are signals: we humans are simply not the right users. Ten years from now, we will look back in surprise, incredulous that we once had humans directly battling crypto systems.

This shift won’t happen overnight. But many technologies only truly align and fall into place when their “complementary technologies” finally appear. GPS had to wait for smartphones; TCP/IP had to wait for the proliferation of browsers. For crypto, that missing piece may well be AI agents.

View Original
Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Meta Clarifies Reality Labs' Cumulative Losses of $80 Billion Were Misreported, Department Still Operating

Meta clarified that its $80 billion loss is primarily attributed to accumulated losses from its Reality Labs division, which encompasses not only the metaverse but also Quest VR headsets and Ray-Ban AI glasses. Reality Labs continues to operate, with projected single-year losses exceeding $19 billion in 2025.

GateNews24m ago

A certain CEX launched on-chain shares of a Bitcoin yield fund, deployed on Ethereum Layer 2 network

A certain CEX's asset management department has launched tokenized shares of a Bitcoin yield fund in collaboration with Apex Group, targeting non-US investors and adopting the ERC-3643 standard to achieve automated compliance. Institutions are accelerating asset tokenization to improve efficiency and reduce costs.

GateNews2h ago

Kalshi Hits $22 Billion Valuation as $1 Billion Capital Injection Defies Regulatory Heat

Kalshi has raised over $1 billion, increasing its valuation to $22 billion in just three months, signaling strong investor confidence despite regulatory challenges. Hyper-Growth in the ‘ Oracle Economy’ The U.S.-regulated prediction market, Kalshi, has reportedly raised more than $1 billion in a

Coinpedia2h ago

The list of the first batch of enterprises residing at the national-level power artificial intelligence pilot base has been announced, including Huawei, ZTE, Baidu, and 5 other organizations.

Gate News reported that on March 21, the National Artificial Intelligence Application Pilot Base (Power Direction in Energy Sector) 2026 Alliance Work Conference and First Ecosystem Activity was held in Guangzhou. Eight enterprise institutions, including State Grid Digital Group's Artificial Intelligence Research Center, Huawei, ZTE, and Baidu, were formally established as the first batch of representatives to enter the pilot base.

GateNews3h ago

Understanding Stablecoins from Circle CEO Interview: Why It's Not a Crypto Asset, But a Network Money Protocol?

Circle Completes IPO, Jeremy Allaire Emphasizes Stablecoins Still in Early Stage, Targeting to Build Digital Dollar Network Infrastructure and Next-Generation Financial Platform. Editor's Note: In 2025, stablecoin issuer Circle completed its IPO, becoming one of the most closely watched listing cases in the crypto industry in recent years. As the issuer of USDC, Circle is attempting to promote stablecoins from a trading tool in the crypto market to a digital dollar infrastructure capable of circulating in networks. In "The David

CryptoCity6h ago

Solana Foundation Chairman Lily Liu Declares "Blockchain Gaming Is Dead," Total Market Cap Drops 87%

Solana Foundation Chair Lily Liu claimed on X platform that "blockchain gaming won't come back," sparking heated discussion in the GameFi circle. The market value of crypto games plummeted from a 2022 peak of $35 billion to $4.5 billion, a decline of 87%. She pointed out that games prioritizing earning mechanisms over gameplay itself caused the market to gradually shrink, while responses within Solana vary, with some projects still adjusting to seek survival.

動區BlockTempo7h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments