One of the least discussed challenges in AI is permissions.
Everyone talks about intelligence.
Almost nobody talks about authority.
Because intelligence alone doesn’t create action.
Permission does.
Execution layers matter.
An AI agent may know exactly what needs to be done.
But without the ability to act, that knowledge has limited value.
That’s where Agent Wallet becomes strategically important.
The wallet isn’t simply storing assets.
It’s enabling delegated machine execution.
Within predefined boundaries.
That distinction is critical.
The goal isn’t unrestricted autonomy.
The goal is controlled autonomy.
An agent can be granted permission to:
➠ sign transactions
➠ access services
➠ manage resources
➠ execute workflows
➠ coordinate payments
while still operating inside predefined constraints.
The hidden insight is that future AI systems may function similarly to employees.
Employees receive authority within specific limits.
Agents may operate the same way.
Not total freedom.
Not total restriction.
Programmable authority.
This creates a safer framework for autonomous execution.
Because organizations don’t need agents that merely understand tasks.
They need agents that can complete tasks.
Execution requires permissions.
Permissions require infrastructure.
And Agent Wallet is effectively becoming that infrastructure layer.
The future AI stack won’t just need intelligence.
It will need mechanisms for safely translating intelligence into action.
That’s where delegated machine execution begins.
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