Most people approach Web 4.0 in the wrong way.
They ask: Is this the next marketing cycle? Is Web 4.0 just another wave of concept creation? These questions miss the point. There is only one real question: Who is the underlying authority of the internet transferring from, and to whom?
Placed in a historical context, the answer has always been clear. Web 1.0 was read-only—users were consumers of content, without write permissions. Web 2.0 granted write permissions—you could post, upload, comment, but the platform owned your data. Web 3.0 granted ownership—assets are on-chain, the private key is in your hand, the platform cannot confiscate your wallet.
Each iteration is, at its core, a downward transfer of authority.
Web 4.0 continues this same logical line, but the recipient of this transfer changes. It's not being transferred to the user; it's being transferred to the Agent.
A neglected structural fact: For a long time, the entire architecture of the internet has been absolutely "human-centric."
Web 2.0's UI/UX was designed for human cognitive bandwidth—information density, click paths, color contrast, every parameter is an estimate of the limits of human attention. Web 3.0's KYC verification, seed phrase backups, multi-signature approvals essentially address the physiological flaws of humans being error-prone and susceptible to attacks.
The entire system serves human limitations, not human capabilities.
But in the AI era, this logic begins to break down. When an Agent gains on-chain permissions, it faces the same system designed for humans, but it doesn't need a beautiful UI, password recovery, SMS verification codes, or to sleep on a transaction confirmation.
This is the core contradiction of Web 4.0: an internet infrastructure designed for human cognitive limitations encounters a new type of participant without cognitive limitations. A rebuild is inevitable.
The ongoing rebuild can be observed from two dimensions.
The first dimension is the disintegration of the frontend. Traditional, polished UIs were designed for human visual processing capabilities. Agents primarily communicate through APIs and code logic; the UI is noise to them, not an entry point. Once Agents become the main interactors with protocols, the logic of the frontend shifts from "how to make the user understand" to "how to make the machine read." This is a paradigm shift unlike any in thirty years of frontend development.
The second dimension is the replacement of the identity verification system. Systems based on usernames and passwords assume the logging-in entity is a human with memory limitations—passwords must be short enough to remember but long enough to be secure. This contradiction spawned the entire password management industry. But an Agent doesn't need to remember passwords. On-chain signatures can be granted and revoked in real-time, with permission granular down to a single operation. The account system will be gradually replaced, not because it was poorly designed, but because its design premise is now obsolete.
These changes in both dimensions can be summarized in one sentence: the gateway will shift from a revolving door designed for humans to an API interface designed for machines.
In this process of infrastructure rebuild, there is a specific closed loop worth examining separately.
AI possesses powerful decision-making capabilities, but it inherently lacks two things: an independent payment channel and asset sovereignty.
An Agent can analyze sentiment data across the global gold market in milliseconds and provide the optimal allocation decision—but if it doesn't have an independent capital account, this decision still requires a human to execute. The delay in the execution环节 erodes all the advantage it accumulated in the analysis phase.
Crypto completes this shortcoming.
Take Hyperliquid as an example: Its perpetual contract markets for commodities like gold, silver, and crude oil operate 24/7. This feature is optional for human traders—a position entered at 3 AM can wait until morning. But for an Agent, this is a necessary infrastructure condition because the Agent itself has no concept of sleep; its operation is round-the-clock.
When an Agent takes over the wallet and private key, it extends from the decision layer to the execution layer. AI provides analysis and judgment, Crypto provides the settlement infrastructure. Together, they form a complete economic entity.
The marginal cost of running an Agent tends towards zero. Its output and trade execution are continuous. For DeFi protocols, this is an unprecedented ideal counterparty—not emotional, doesn't forget, doesn't miss the optimal execution window because of a daytime meeting.
This is the real narrative of Crypto × AI: not the叠加 of two buzzwords, but complementary infrastructures connecting at the same historical moment.
Here is a perhaps not entirely appropriate example.
In 1908, the Ford Model T entered mass production. In the first few years, the mainstream opinion among critics was: the car is an upgraded version of the carriage, a toy suitable for the wealthy. No one foresaw that the car would rewrite the spatial logic of entire cities, spawn gas station chains, destroy railroad passenger transport, and turn Detroit into a global manufacturing center.
The missed key point wasn't the car itself, but how the car changed the entire society's function of time and space cost.
The structural significance of Web 4.0 is similar. Surface-level questions—which products will boom, which protocols will win—are like the "which car model will sell best" questions of the Model T era. The real proposition is: When Agents become the main on-chain participants, with scale and concurrency exponentially surpassing humans, in what dimensions will the rules of the economic system shift?






