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The Next Generation of Payments Lies Not in the Payment Layer

The Next-Generation of Payment is Not in the Payment Layer This is the second piece in a series analyzing Stripe's AI strategy. The series stems from Stripe's vision of becoming the economic infrastructure for the AI Agent era, announced at Stripe Sessions 2026. A key debate centers on whether Know Your Agent (KYA) is merely an upgrade to existing payment systems. The author argues the opposite: payment will become a subsystem of KYA, not the other way around. Historically, major payment innovations (online banking, mobile wallets, QR codes) emerged from new transaction scenarios that broke the underlying assumptions of old systems, not from optimization within the payment layer itself. Agent economy is that new scenario, and KYA is the foundational infrastructure growing to support it. KYA's proposed five layers—Agent Identity, Authorization Scope, Intent Signing, Liability Chain Auditing, and Credit Rating—extend far beyond payments. Only authorization and auditing directly touch the payment链路. Identity, intent, and credit layers serve broader needs like cross-platform calls, AI alignment, and permission management. Stripe's strategic moves validate this view. Its focus on "economic infrastructure for AI," investments in protocols like Agentic Commerce Protocol (an identity/session protocol), Shared Payment Tokens, stablecoin infrastructure, embedded wallets, and its own Tempo blockchain for settlement, all point to building the KYA layer, not just optimizing payments. Data shows the core challenge in AI commerce has shifted upstream: determining "who this is, what they intend to do, and if they deserve resources" happens long before checkout. This is why Stripe is moving its Radar fraud prevention from the transaction moment to the entire user lifecycle—a KYA-layer concern. Legally, ultimate responsibility will still fall on a human, as laws like AB 316 dictate. However, in a distributed,网状 liability chain involving users, Agent platforms, model providers, and payment protocols, KYA's role is to use cryptography to make every entity's actions and roles verifiable and traceable. This enables accountability where it was previously impossible to pinpoint evidence, fundamentally changing责任追溯, not just payment efficiency. The next-generation payment形态 will not be designed within the payment layer. It will emerge from the Agent economy scenario after the KYA infrastructure is established.

marsbit05/10 03:16

The Next Generation of Payments Lies Not in the Payment Layer

marsbit05/10 03:16

The Next Generation of Payments Is Not in the Payment Layer

The next generation of payments won't be designed within the payment layer itself. This article argues that historical payment innovations (e.g., online banking, mobile wallets) emerged from new transactional scenarios, not from optimizing existing payment systems. The new scenario is the Agent economy. Know Your Agent (KYA) is not merely a payment-layer upgrade for efficiency. It is the foundational infrastructure layer for the Agent economy. KYA’s five layers—Agent identity, authorization scope, intent signature, accountability chain audit, and credit rating—primarily serve broader needs like cross-platform identification, AI alignment, and permission management. Payment is just one application built on top of this KYA foundation. Stripe’s strategy exemplifies this shift. Its focus on "economic infrastructure for AI," investments in protocols like the Agentic Commerce Protocol (identity/session layer), stablecoin infrastructure, embedded wallets, and moving risk management (Radar) to the user lifecycle all indicate it is building the KYA layer, not just optimizing payments. While ultimate legal liability remains with a human (as laws like AB 316 stipulate), KYA enables traceability in a distributed,网状 responsibility chain involving multiple entities (user, Agent platform, model provider, etc.). It makes accountability verifiable where previously it was opaque. The conclusion: A new class of economic actors (Agents) forces a new infrastructure layer (KYA) to emerge. This layer redefines identity, authorization, and accountability. On top of it, the next generation of payment will reorganize and emerge from the demands of the scenario, not from within the traditional payment system.

链捕手05/10 03:10

The Next Generation of Payments Is Not in the Payment Layer

链捕手05/10 03:10

The AI Economy I Saw at Stripe Sessions 2026

"At Stripe Sessions 2026, the AI economy's impact is undeniable, echoing the delayed productivity recognition seen with computers in the '90s. Stripe's data shows an AI boom: new business formation has surged vertically since early 2026, with companies generating revenue 5x faster than a year ago. AI firms like Lovable and Cursor scale to billions in months. Two key features define this economy: unprecedented speed and being 'global by default,' with companies reaching 55+ countries in their first year. Stripe's global financial infrastructure is critical for this instant international commerce. The conference's central theme was 'Agentic Commerce'—a future where AI agents become economic participants. Demos showed agents autonomously purchasing data, generating reports, and selling them. This shift introduces micro-payments and continuous 'strategic' spending, as agents lack human cognitive friction. New challenges like fraud targeting AI's real inference costs are met with systems like Stripe's Radar. The transition requires an ecosystem. Stripe is collaborating on protocols like the Machine Payments Protocol (MPP) and joining the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) to enable seamless agent-to-agent transactions. Underpinning this vision is Stripe's philosophy: 'money is data,' programmable and operable by agents. Thus, Stripe is not just powering the AI economy but acting as its 'heart-rate monitor,' capturing its rapid pulse through transactions equating to nearly 2% of global GDP."

marsbit05/08 05:58

The AI Economy I Saw at Stripe Sessions 2026

marsbit05/08 05:58

Stripe Rises, PayPal Falls: The New King of Payments Ascends the Throne

Stripe, the global payments infrastructure giant, surged to a $159 billion valuation in February 2026, marking a 74% increase from the previous year. It processed $1.9 trillion in annual transaction volume, accounting for 1.6% of global GDP. In contrast, PayPal, the legacy payments leader, faced stagnation with just 4.3% revenue growth in 2025, a sharp decline in core checkout growth, and flat active user numbers. Reports emerged that Stripe is considering acquiring PayPal. Stripe’s success is driven by strategic bets on next-generation technologies: it acquired stablecoin infrastructure firm Bridge and crypto wallet provider Privy, and co-developed the Tempo blockchain, capable of over 100,000 TPS. It also partnered with OpenAI to create the Agent Commerce Protocol, enabling AI agents to conduct micro-payments via stablecoins. These moves position Stripe at the center of AI and crypto-powered transaction growth. Meanwhile, PayPal struggled with innovation. Its stablecoin PYUSD held less than 0.5% market share, and its management acknowledged execution failures. While PayPal remains a cash-generating business with 439 million active accounts, it has been slow to adapt to shifting industry paradigms. The divergence highlights a fundamental strategic difference: Stripe is building the infrastructure for the future of payments—on-chain settlement, AI economies, and programmable money—while PayPal has been optimizing within an outdated framework. The industry is now racing toward stablecoin and blockchain-based payments, a transition Stripe began leading nearly two years ahead of competitors like Visa and Mastercard.

marsbit04/01 06:39

Stripe Rises, PayPal Falls: The New King of Payments Ascends the Throne

marsbit04/01 06:39

Understanding x402 and MPP: Two Approaches to Agent Payments

Stripe's MPP and x402 represent two competing approaches to enabling machine-to-machine payments, both leveraging the long-dormant HTTP 402 status code ("Payment Required"). x402, led by Coinbase, is a minimalist protocol that embeds payment directly into HTTP requests. It requires no accounts, API keys, or intermediaries. A server returns a 402 response with payment details; the client pays on-chain and resubmits the request with a proof. It's open-source, chain-agnostic (currently supporting Base, Polygon, Solana), and designed for open, permissionless systems. However, current usage is low, with small microtransactions. MPP, developed by Stripe and Tempo, is a full-stack solution built for high-frequency agent transactions. Its core innovation is sessions, allowing an agent to pre-authorize a spending limit and make numerous micro-payments within it without repeated on-chain transactions. It runs on the Tempo blockchain, optimized for high throughput and sub-second confirmations. Crucially, it integrates with Stripe's existing compliance, risk, and fiat infrastructure, including support for credit cards via Shared Payment Tokens (SPTs). While x402 offers simplicity and decentralization, MPP provides scalability and enterprise-grade features. Stripe supports both, aiming to capture agent payment flows regardless of the underlying protocol. The ecosystem is still experimental, but major players like Google, Visa, and Anthropic are involved. The choice depends on the use case: x402 for open, long-tail applications, and MPP for commercial, high-volume scenarios.

marsbit03/22 03:30

Understanding x402 and MPP: Two Approaches to Agent Payments

marsbit03/22 03:30

Why Did Five Giants Jump In Within a Week to Open Bank Accounts for AI?

The article discusses a significant trend where five major companies—Stripe, Paradigm, Visa, Mastercard, and Coinbase—collectively launched initiatives within a week to enable AI systems to autonomously conduct financial transactions. Stripe and Paradigm introduced Tempo, a $5 billion blockchain project focused on machine-to-machine payments via its Machine Payments Protocol (MPP). Visa launched a command-line tool for AI agents to make credit card payments, while Coinbase upgraded its x402 protocol to support broader token payments. Mastercard acquired stablecoin firm BVNK for $1.8 billion to facilitate crypto-based transactions. World, co-founded by Sam Altman, released an identity verification toolkit for AI agents. The push stems from the growing capability of AI agents to perform complex tasks independently, creating a need for payment infrastructure that doesn’t require human intervention at every step. Traditional payment giants see an opportunity to leverage their existing networks, while crypto companies argue that blockchain-based systems offer a more seamless solution for non-human entities. Despite the high valuations and investments, current transaction volumes remain low (e.g., x402 recorded ~$65k in 24 hours). The situation parallels past infrastructure booms, where early investment outpaced immediate demand. The race to dominate AI payments is underway, but widespread adoption may take time.

比推03/19 13:15

Why Did Five Giants Jump In Within a Week to Open Bank Accounts for AI?

比推03/19 13:15

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