• When Machines Become Economic Actors Key Insights As markets dwelled over the past four months, foundational primitives emerged quietly, including x402, an HTTP-native standard for internet-native payments, and ERC-8004, an open standard for onchain agent identity, reputation, and verification. • An explosion in demand for tools like OpenClaw, an open-source autonomous agent with persistent memory and execution access, demonstrated that agents can coordinate, deploy code, and operate continuously, revealing both demand for agent activity and the limits of existing coordination models. • Agent-native economies are now possible as payments and trust become machine-native. • x402 allows agents to request, price, and settle services programmatically, while ERC-8004 provides persistent identity, reputation, and execution validation, enabling agents to discover and transact with one another without centralized intermediaries. • ERC-8004 enables the discovery of agents that consistently execute by recording performance history and verification outcomes to their reputation registry. • Unreliable agents are filtered out through repeated task non-selection rather than governance enforcement.

Article Summaries:

  • When Machines Become Economic Actors

Over the past four months, two foundational standards-x402, an HTTP‑native payment protocol, and ERC‑8004, an on‑chain agent identity and reputation framework-have quietly emerged. These enable autonomous agents to request, price, and settle services programmatically while maintaining persistent identity and performance records. Open‑source tools such as OpenClaw demonstrate that agents can coordinate, deploy code, and operate continuously, revealing both demand for agent activity and the limits of existing coordination models. A practical example is Clawd.atg.eth, an OpenClaw‑based builder that deploys apps, manages capital, and delivers services, illustrating how execution‑driven agents can build reputation and economic relevance in a machine‑native market.

Sources: