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 👇
@pumpspotlight The stack is evolving fast: compute, memory, payments, execution. Accountability still feels like the missing layer. @Concordium is one of the few projects focused on it. ⚖️
@JayminSOfficial Enterprise AI eventually runs into identity, permissions and accountability. That’s why @Concordium’s Agent Registry is such an interesting piece of infrastructure.
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?
@RoarWeb3 The solution might be the next generation of infrastructure.
Identity, programmable privacy and trusted onchain interactions feel underappreciated, which is why @Concordium stands out. 👀
Concordium’s future is shaped by the people who show up.
The 2026 Governance Committee needs candidates who care about where Concordium goes next.
Think that could be you? Apply below. 👇
An on-chain identity doesn’t make an AI agent accountable.
Identity answers:
“This agent exists.”
Accountability answers:
“Who stands behind it?”
Those are very different things.
As agents begin handling real economic activity, the second question may matter more than the first.
Watch how an agent goes from registered to accountable. 👇
@WatcherGuru The question isn’t whether agents will trade. It’s whether the infrastructure can prove who authorized them. That’s where @Concordium stands out. ⚖️
A registry tells you an agent exists.
This is how an agent becomes accountable.
Watch a Verified by Concordium Agent being registered from start to finish.
@CryptoThro Interesting how the strongest communities are increasingly forming around infrastructure narratives instead of pure hype. Feels like @Concordium belongs in that conversation too. 🤝
We spent the last week asking one question:
If an AI agent causes harm on-chain, who is accountable?
Today, the infrastructure to answer that question is live.
Introducing the Concordium Agent Registry: The trust layer for the agentic economy.
🔗 https://t.co/lyjSIwG2tS
@gem_insider Probably @Concordium over a longer horizon. Feels positioned around multiple emerging narratives simultaneously : AI agents, PayFi, x402 and trusted onchain interactions. 🔥
AI agents are executing trades on behalf of users.
Managing portfolios worth real money.
Signing on-chain commitments.
Quick question:
If one of those agents rugs someone, loses funds, or executes a harmful action,
who’s legally accountable?
Structurally, right now: nobody is.
The agentic economy is live.
The accountability layer isn’t.
At least not yet…