Kite isn't chasing speed records. They're forcing us to answer the real question: When your AI agent empties a wallet at 3 AM, who's actually accountable?



Most blockchains act like one wallet = one person = one unbreakable decision. Reality doesn't.

What if your trading bot (or shopping agent) goes off the rails? Kite's three-layer system separates the human owner, the delegated agent, and temporary session permissions.

Agents become like employees: Powerful, but bounded by rules you set. Tiny shift, huge impact.

Sessions are revocable keys—kill one bad action without nuking your whole setup. No drama.

They're engineering for inevitable screw-ups, because autonomous agents *will* fail eventually.

The wild part: Kite is openly courting regulators. Everyone else hides; they're building audit trails and traceable rules from day one.

Each agent is like a mini-entity with clear policies. You prove authorization without doxxing your life.

This isn't just infra—it's a profound test: How much control do we really want to hand machines?

By 2026, banks and platforms will desperately need exactly this: Verifiable proof of "who approved what" when AI pulls the trigger.

Kite slipped in first, quietly building the foundation while the hype chased elsewhere. 🚀
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