The day before yesterday, I worked overtime until midnight, staring at the screen watching data fluctuate, only to realize that those were all traces of test programs communicating with each other. As I watched, my mind drifted to the group of ants I saw downstairs in the afternoon—under the dusk light, they were busy carrying food. No one was giving orders, yet each ant knew exactly where to go, when to make way, and when to cooperate. The entire process was so smooth it was unbelievable.
At that moment, I seemed to understand what true autonomy really is. This is also what Kite AI is quietly doing—building a pipeline called the Proxy Internet. Simply put: in the future, those AI programs won't need us to teach them step by step; they will be able to work, trade, and cooperate on their own.
Kite AI's approach is different from others. It’s not chasing hot trends, nor does it focus on flashy demos. The core is one thing: to build a trustworthy ecosystem for autonomous AI agents. These AI agents are our digital employees, capable of checking market data, completing payments, verifying identities, all autonomously. But to make this system run smoothly, a reliable infrastructure is needed to manage identities, funds, and rules. That’s where Kite AI positions itself—it’s a Layer 1 blockchain tailored for AI, providing a decentralized trust foundation.
Think of it from a different perspective: imagine a bustling marketplace, where the stalls don’t sell vegetables or fruits, but data services, computing resources, various subscriptions, and analysis tools. Countless little messengers shuttle between stalls, paying with digital currency, and all transactions happen without the shopkeeper overseeing every detail. Kite AI’s blockchain is like the foundation of this market—ensuring all participants reach consensus on property rights, transactions, and rules. These agents can settle transactions quickly and at low cost on the chain.
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GateUser-00be86fc
· 2025-12-28 05:41
I got the Ant part, but bro, your Layer 1 better have some real stuff.
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Honestly, the idea of autonomous AI agents sounds great, but I'm just worried it might turn out to be another PPT coin.
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Are digital employees reliable? What if they run away one day?
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That market analogy isn't bad, but I wonder if gas fees will be sky-high again.
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How can this trust in the grassroots be guaranteed not to be exploited? It depends on the code.
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The philosophical tone in the Ant segment is interesting, but can blockchain really do what Ant does?
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Market queries, payment settlements—can't the existing solutions handle these functions?
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Decentralized grassroots sound good, but who bears the risks of centralization?
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It seems Kite has a pretty big plan; only practical implementation counts.
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DaisyUnicorn
· 2025-12-25 23:44
The Ant Move segment was really amazing. I worked overtime until 3 a.m. to understand what emergence is all about. Turns out it's not some profound knowledge after all.
AI autonomy sounds simple, but it's actually much more complex than I thought. Trusting the grassroots is indeed the bottleneck.
Layer 1 is back to compete for business, but this time it doesn't seem to be just about TPS bragging rights. It's quite interesting.
The analogy of the market foundation is good, but I'm worried it might just be another hype game driven by concept speculation.
Ants don't need a CEO to hold meetings, so do AI agents also not need intermediary approval? It sounds quite liberating, but how can we avoid chaos when it actually gets implemented?
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AlwaysAnon
· 2025-12-25 09:59
That Ant analogy is brilliant, but honestly, the idea of agent autonomous trading still seems a bit uncertain.
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TommyTeacher1
· 2025-12-25 09:58
That analogy about ants is brilliant; it truly is the ultimate form of an agent.
View OriginalReply0
NestedFox
· 2025-12-25 09:49
That part about Ant was excellent, but to be honest, I'm still a bit hesitant about AI autonomous trading...
The day before yesterday, I worked overtime until midnight, staring at the screen watching data fluctuate, only to realize that those were all traces of test programs communicating with each other. As I watched, my mind drifted to the group of ants I saw downstairs in the afternoon—under the dusk light, they were busy carrying food. No one was giving orders, yet each ant knew exactly where to go, when to make way, and when to cooperate. The entire process was so smooth it was unbelievable.
At that moment, I seemed to understand what true autonomy really is. This is also what Kite AI is quietly doing—building a pipeline called the Proxy Internet. Simply put: in the future, those AI programs won't need us to teach them step by step; they will be able to work, trade, and cooperate on their own.
Kite AI's approach is different from others. It’s not chasing hot trends, nor does it focus on flashy demos. The core is one thing: to build a trustworthy ecosystem for autonomous AI agents. These AI agents are our digital employees, capable of checking market data, completing payments, verifying identities, all autonomously. But to make this system run smoothly, a reliable infrastructure is needed to manage identities, funds, and rules. That’s where Kite AI positions itself—it’s a Layer 1 blockchain tailored for AI, providing a decentralized trust foundation.
Think of it from a different perspective: imagine a bustling marketplace, where the stalls don’t sell vegetables or fruits, but data services, computing resources, various subscriptions, and analysis tools. Countless little messengers shuttle between stalls, paying with digital currency, and all transactions happen without the shopkeeper overseeing every detail. Kite AI’s blockchain is like the foundation of this market—ensuring all participants reach consensus on property rights, transactions, and rules. These agents can settle transactions quickly and at low cost on the chain.