If the future of the internet involves a bazaar of agents paying each other for services, crypto will find a level of mainstream product-market fit it could previously only dream of. While I feel confident agents will pay each other for services, it’s less clear to me whether the bazaar approach will win.
By “bazaar,” I mean a decentralized, permissionless ecosystem of independently developed, loosely coordinated agents — an internet more like an open marketplace than a centrally planned system. The canonical example of a bazaar that “won” is Linux. This contrasts with the “cathedral” model: tightly controlled, vertically integrated services managed by a few large players. The canonical example here is Windows. (The term comes from Eric Raymond’s classic essay, “The Cathedral and the Bazaar,” which framed open-source development as chaotic but adaptive — an evolutionary system that can outperform carefully curated structures over time.)
Let’s unpack each condition — agentic payments and the rise of the bazaar — and then explain why, if both come true, crypto becomes not just useful, but necessary.
Condition #1: Payments will be integrated into most agent transactions.
The internet as we know it subsidizes costs by selling ads based on how many human eyeballs see an app’s page. But in a world of agents, humans won’t be going to websites anymore for online services. And apps will increasingly be agent-based instead of UI-based.
Agents do not have eyeballs to sell ads to, so there is a strong case that apps will need to shift their monetization strategy to charge agents directly for their services. This is basically the way things occur right now with APIs — services like LinkedIn are free, but if you want to use the API (the “bot” user), you must pay for it.
Given this, it seems likely that payments will be integrated into most agent transactions. Agents will offer services and charge users/agents in microtransactions. For example, you may ask your personal agent to find a great candidate for a job on LinkedIn. The personal agent will talk to the LinkedIn Recruiting Agent, which charges a fee upfront for the service.
Condition #2: Users will rely on agents with hyper-specialized prompting/data/tools built by independent developers, forming a bazaar of untrusted agents that call on each other for services.
This condition makes sense in principle, but I’m not sure how it will play out in practice.
Here’s the argument for why the bazaar will form:
In this bazaar scenario, the vast majority of agents offering their services will be relatively untrusted because they will be offered by obscure developers and will be niche in their usage. It will be very difficult for the agents in the long tail to build the sufficient reputation needed to earn the imprimatur of trust. This trust issue will be particularly acute under the daisy chain paradigm, where a user’s trust weakens along each link in the chain as services are delegated further and further from the agent the user trusts (or can even reasonably identify).
However, when thinking of how this might be realized in practice, there are a number of open questions:
If the practical realities do not support the bazaar scenario, the vast majority of agents offering their services will be relatively trusted because they will be developed by major brands. Agents can restrict their interactions to a curated set of trusted agents, relying on trust chains to enforce service guarantees.
If the internet becomes a bazaar of specialized but largely untrusted agents (Condition #2) performing services for payment (Condition #1), then crypto’s role becomes much clearer: it provides the guarantee needed to underwrite transactions in a low-trust environment.
While users will interact with online services with reckless abandon when it’s free (because the worst that happens is wasted time), when money is on the line, users demand assurance that they’ll get what they pay for. Today, users get that assurance through a “trust-but-verify” flow. You trust the counterparty or platform you are paying for a service and verify you received the service ex post.
But in a bazaar of agents, trust and ex post verification will not be nearly as available.
The upshot is that the “trust-but-verify” paradigm we currently rely on will not be sustainable in this universe. And this is the precise environment in which crypto excels — exchanging value in untrusted environments. Crypto does this by replacing trust, reputation, and after-the-fact human verification with cryptographic and cryptoeconomic guarantees.
Practically, crypto allows us to make payments atomic with proof of service — no agent gets paid unless the work is verifiably done. In a permissionless agent economy, this is the only scalable way to ensure reliability at the edge.
To summarize, if the vast majority of agent transactions do not involve payment (meaning Condition #1 is not met) or are with trusted brands (meaning Condition #2 is not met) we probably won’t need crypto rails for agents. This is because users are fine interacting with untrusted parties when money is not on the line, and when money is on the line agents can simply whitelist a limited number of trusted brands/institutions to interact with, and chains of trust can enforce the promises of services each agent is offering.
But if both conditions are met, crypto becomes indispensable infrastructure as the only scalable way to verify work and enforce payments in a low-trust, permissionless environment. Crypto gives the bazaar the tools to outcompete the cathedral.
Thank you to Zach (Axiom), cwm (Soulgraph), Felix (EdenLayer), ilemi (Herd), Lincoln (Coinbase), Nima (EigenLayer), and Tommy (Delphi) for their thoughtful feedback and discussion on this article.
Thank you to my colleague Jack for countless hours of debate on this topic.
All information contained herein is for general information purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any investment and should not be used in the evaluation of the merits of making any investment decision. It should not be relied upon for accounting, legal or tax advice or investment recommendations. You should consult your own advisers as to legal, business, tax, and other related matters concerning any investment. None of the opinions or positions provided herein are intended to be treated as legal advice or to create an attorney-client relationship. Certain information contained in here has been obtained from third-party sources, including from portfolio companies of funds managed by Variant. While taken from sources believed to be reliable, Variant has not independently verified such information. Any investments or portfolio companies mentioned, referred to, or described are not representative of all investments in vehicles managed by Variant, and there can be no assurance that the investments will be profitable or that other investments made in the future will have similar characteristics or results. A list of investments made by funds managed by Variant (excluding investments for which the issuer has not provided permission for Variant to disclose publicly as well as unannounced investments in publicly traded digital assets) is available at https://variant.fund/portfolio. Variant makes no representations about the enduring accuracy of the information or its appropriateness for a given situation. This post reflects the current opinions of the authors and is not made on behalf of Variant or its Clients and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of Variant, its General Partners, its affiliates, advisors or individuals associated with Variant. The opinions reflected herein are subject to change without being updated. All liability with respect to actions taken or not taken based on the contents of the information contained herein are hereby expressly disclaimed. The content of this post is provided “as is;” no representations are made that the content is error-free.
Partilhar
Conteúdos
If the future of the internet involves a bazaar of agents paying each other for services, crypto will find a level of mainstream product-market fit it could previously only dream of. While I feel confident agents will pay each other for services, it’s less clear to me whether the bazaar approach will win.
By “bazaar,” I mean a decentralized, permissionless ecosystem of independently developed, loosely coordinated agents — an internet more like an open marketplace than a centrally planned system. The canonical example of a bazaar that “won” is Linux. This contrasts with the “cathedral” model: tightly controlled, vertically integrated services managed by a few large players. The canonical example here is Windows. (The term comes from Eric Raymond’s classic essay, “The Cathedral and the Bazaar,” which framed open-source development as chaotic but adaptive — an evolutionary system that can outperform carefully curated structures over time.)
Let’s unpack each condition — agentic payments and the rise of the bazaar — and then explain why, if both come true, crypto becomes not just useful, but necessary.
Condition #1: Payments will be integrated into most agent transactions.
The internet as we know it subsidizes costs by selling ads based on how many human eyeballs see an app’s page. But in a world of agents, humans won’t be going to websites anymore for online services. And apps will increasingly be agent-based instead of UI-based.
Agents do not have eyeballs to sell ads to, so there is a strong case that apps will need to shift their monetization strategy to charge agents directly for their services. This is basically the way things occur right now with APIs — services like LinkedIn are free, but if you want to use the API (the “bot” user), you must pay for it.
Given this, it seems likely that payments will be integrated into most agent transactions. Agents will offer services and charge users/agents in microtransactions. For example, you may ask your personal agent to find a great candidate for a job on LinkedIn. The personal agent will talk to the LinkedIn Recruiting Agent, which charges a fee upfront for the service.
Condition #2: Users will rely on agents with hyper-specialized prompting/data/tools built by independent developers, forming a bazaar of untrusted agents that call on each other for services.
This condition makes sense in principle, but I’m not sure how it will play out in practice.
Here’s the argument for why the bazaar will form:
In this bazaar scenario, the vast majority of agents offering their services will be relatively untrusted because they will be offered by obscure developers and will be niche in their usage. It will be very difficult for the agents in the long tail to build the sufficient reputation needed to earn the imprimatur of trust. This trust issue will be particularly acute under the daisy chain paradigm, where a user’s trust weakens along each link in the chain as services are delegated further and further from the agent the user trusts (or can even reasonably identify).
However, when thinking of how this might be realized in practice, there are a number of open questions:
If the practical realities do not support the bazaar scenario, the vast majority of agents offering their services will be relatively trusted because they will be developed by major brands. Agents can restrict their interactions to a curated set of trusted agents, relying on trust chains to enforce service guarantees.
If the internet becomes a bazaar of specialized but largely untrusted agents (Condition #2) performing services for payment (Condition #1), then crypto’s role becomes much clearer: it provides the guarantee needed to underwrite transactions in a low-trust environment.
While users will interact with online services with reckless abandon when it’s free (because the worst that happens is wasted time), when money is on the line, users demand assurance that they’ll get what they pay for. Today, users get that assurance through a “trust-but-verify” flow. You trust the counterparty or platform you are paying for a service and verify you received the service ex post.
But in a bazaar of agents, trust and ex post verification will not be nearly as available.
The upshot is that the “trust-but-verify” paradigm we currently rely on will not be sustainable in this universe. And this is the precise environment in which crypto excels — exchanging value in untrusted environments. Crypto does this by replacing trust, reputation, and after-the-fact human verification with cryptographic and cryptoeconomic guarantees.
Practically, crypto allows us to make payments atomic with proof of service — no agent gets paid unless the work is verifiably done. In a permissionless agent economy, this is the only scalable way to ensure reliability at the edge.
To summarize, if the vast majority of agent transactions do not involve payment (meaning Condition #1 is not met) or are with trusted brands (meaning Condition #2 is not met) we probably won’t need crypto rails for agents. This is because users are fine interacting with untrusted parties when money is not on the line, and when money is on the line agents can simply whitelist a limited number of trusted brands/institutions to interact with, and chains of trust can enforce the promises of services each agent is offering.
But if both conditions are met, crypto becomes indispensable infrastructure as the only scalable way to verify work and enforce payments in a low-trust, permissionless environment. Crypto gives the bazaar the tools to outcompete the cathedral.
Thank you to Zach (Axiom), cwm (Soulgraph), Felix (EdenLayer), ilemi (Herd), Lincoln (Coinbase), Nima (EigenLayer), and Tommy (Delphi) for their thoughtful feedback and discussion on this article.
Thank you to my colleague Jack for countless hours of debate on this topic.
All information contained herein is for general information purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any investment and should not be used in the evaluation of the merits of making any investment decision. It should not be relied upon for accounting, legal or tax advice or investment recommendations. You should consult your own advisers as to legal, business, tax, and other related matters concerning any investment. None of the opinions or positions provided herein are intended to be treated as legal advice or to create an attorney-client relationship. Certain information contained in here has been obtained from third-party sources, including from portfolio companies of funds managed by Variant. While taken from sources believed to be reliable, Variant has not independently verified such information. Any investments or portfolio companies mentioned, referred to, or described are not representative of all investments in vehicles managed by Variant, and there can be no assurance that the investments will be profitable or that other investments made in the future will have similar characteristics or results. A list of investments made by funds managed by Variant (excluding investments for which the issuer has not provided permission for Variant to disclose publicly as well as unannounced investments in publicly traded digital assets) is available at https://variant.fund/portfolio. Variant makes no representations about the enduring accuracy of the information or its appropriateness for a given situation. This post reflects the current opinions of the authors and is not made on behalf of Variant or its Clients and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of Variant, its General Partners, its affiliates, advisors or individuals associated with Variant. The opinions reflected herein are subject to change without being updated. All liability with respect to actions taken or not taken based on the contents of the information contained herein are hereby expressly disclaimed. The content of this post is provided “as is;” no representations are made that the content is error-free.