⏰ Starting in 2 hours.
AI agents can already act autonomously.
The next challenge is accountability.
Join @PeterMarirosans and @ChrisJourdan to discuss what’s needed to build trust in the agentic economy.
👇
@Aptos@useTria The @BitcoinCom Wallet integration 🌐 still feels like one of the most underrated developments around @Concordium.
Distribution matters just as much as technology 👀🔐
AI agents can already transact, execute, and coordinate.
But one question remains largely unanswered:
Who is accountable when something goes wrong?
Tomorrow, our CTO @PeterMarirosans joins @ChrisJourdan to discuss agent identity, accountability, and the infrastructure needed for the agentic economy.
Tune in 👇
Just over 5 hours until we go live!
Join Richard Vasquez, Director at MakaChain, for an exclusive Tech Talk covering the latest developments across all MakaChain verticals.
Set a reminder now and see you there!
https://t.co/2eOmmf7cag
Seeing $CCD outperform a lot of the market today 📈 naturally gets people asking the same question:
Why is Concordium attracting attention right now? 👀
Price action is always the most visible signal.
But in my experience, the more interesting story is usually what sits behind the price action.
The AI narrative 🤖 is becoming one of the biggest conversations in both crypto and technology.
Everyone is talking about smarter agents.
More autonomous systems.
More automation.
More economic activity being handled by software.
But as agents begin interacting with users, businesses, wallets, and real value 💸, a new challenge starts emerging.
Trust.
Not whether an agent can perform an action.
Whether that agent can be trusted to perform that action.
That’s where @Concordium starts looking increasingly relevant to me.
Over the past months, we’ve seen the launch of the Agent Registry,
the introduction of Verified by Concordium Badges, accountable AI
agent infrastructure, and a growing focus on connecting agents to verifiable human or business entities 🔐
What I find particularly interesting is that this isn’t limited to Concordium itself.
Agents built on Ethereum can benefit from these trust layers without migration, which makes the approach much more practical for adoption.
At the same time, Concordium continues building around protocol-level identity,
privacy-preserving verification, Verify & Access, and infrastructure that allows
users to prove information without unnecessarily exposing personal data.
To me, these aren’t separate products.
They’re pieces of the same vision.
A future where autonomous systems can interact at scale while remaining accountable, verifiable, and trusted.
The market often rewards hype first.
Eventually it starts rewarding infrastructure.
If AI agents continue becoming a larger part of the digital economy, the need for trusted identity, accountability, and verifiable interactions may become impossible to ignore.
That’s why I think the conversation around Concordium is becoming much bigger than price alone 👀🚀
Scenario:
Someone seeks medical advice online.
An AI health agent is given access to patient records.
It recommends a treatment.
The recommendation causes harm.
An investigation begins.
Who is accountable?
The agent exists.
The wallet exists.
The transaction history exists.
The responsible person doesn’t.
That’s the difference between an agent registry and an accountability layer.
As AI agents move into healthcare, finance, and other regulated industries, proving an agent exists won’t be enough.
The harder question is:
Who stands behind it?