The Next Generation of Payments Lies Not in the Payment Layer

marsbit2026-05-10 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-05-10 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

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. ...

Author: IreneDu

This is article 2.5 in the series analyzing Stripe's AI strategy.

The series originated from observing that Stripe Sessions 2026 announced 288 products on April 30. I noted that Stripe is attempting to become the economic infrastructure for the AI Agent era.

The first article, Stripe is Not a Payments Company, aimed to answer "Why Stripe?"—its DNA dictates its capability for this role.

The second article, KYC is Dead: The Agent Economy is Rewriting the Foundation of Financial Regulation, intended to dissect the future Stripe is betting on—what the Agent Economy truly looks like and why traditional payment infrastructure will fail completely in its presence.

However, while writing the second article, I received a comment from a colleague:

I completely agree with the first half. Neither AB 316 nor any sovereign state's laws will recognize "Agent as a legal entity" in the short term—the ultimate defendant will always be a specific person. Know Your Agent cannot and will not change this fact.

But I have reservations about the second half—"The only change is the efficiency of payment and settlement." The issue is not with the conclusion, but with the default framework: it views KYA as merely an upgrade to the existing payment system.

This is precisely what I believe merits an additional article for discussion.

First, let's return to the muscle memory of a former payment practitioner:

Payment forms are driven by scenarios, not designed from within the payment system itself.

Every true leap in payments—online banking, mobile wallets, QR code scanning—was not because someone created a better product at the payment layer, but because a new transaction scenario emerged, shattering the underlying assumptions of the old payment system.

New payment forms "emerge" from the infrastructure demanded by that scenario, not "optimized out" of existing systems.

I once worked on payment innovation at Ant Group. Within a platform that was an absolute industry leader, having pioneered "Quick Pay," "Mobile Payment," and "QR Code Payment," the greatest joy and pain was contemplating: What is the next generation of payment?

We developed watch payments (and heartbeat authentication as an alternative to facial recognition), NFC payments (the original tech behind "touch to pay"), participated in drafting several "next-generation" payment protocols, and even attempted to secure leadership support for exploring metaverse payments.

Most of these projects didn't succeed.

Looking back, the reason was the same: we attempted to define new payments at the payment layer, but the scenario driving payment transformation hadn't arrived yet—without the scenario, the infrastructure it needs cannot emerge, and no amount of clever design at the payment layer can support it.

The Agent Economy is precisely that new scenario I was waiting for.

KYA is the layer of infrastructure currently emerging.

KYA is not a product within the payment layer; it is an infrastructure layer for the Agent Economy.

The five layers of KYA I defined in the previous article—Agent Identity, Authorization Scope, Intent Signing, Liability Chain Audit, Credit Rating—only the Authorization Scope and Liability Chain Audit layers reside on the payment chain. The other three (Identity, Intent, Credit) are not within payments at all.

  • The Identity layer serves all scenarios requiring Agent identification: cross-platform calls, regulatory filing, internal corporate audits—payment is just one of them.
  • The Intent layer serves the broader issue of AI alignment—payment is just one of its many verification scenarios.
  • The Credit layer serves any system needing to assign permissions and quotas to Agents—payment is again just one user of it.

Therefore, my colleague's assertion that "the only change is the efficiency of payment and settlement," translates into infrastructure terms as: viewing KYA as a subsystem of payments.

My judgment is the reverse: payments are a subsystem of KYA.

This reversal is the core of this discussion.

Stripe's investment actions at the industry frontline serve as empirical evidence.

Patrick Collison used the term not "AI payments" but "economic infrastructure for AI" at Sessions 2026. This is not marketing language; it's a positioning choice. It indicates Stripe doesn't intend to lock itself into the identity of a "payments company"; it's betting on being the foundation for the Agent Economy.

Regarding specific product positioning:

The Agentic Commerce Protocol (ACP), jointly built by Stripe and OpenAI, now used by Microsoft Copilot, Meta, and Google Gemini (who joined in April)—it is essentially an identity and session protocol, not a payment protocol.

Shared Payment Token, which separates the Agent from the real card number, functions at the authorization layer, not the settlement layer.

Stripe acquiring Bridge for stablecoin infrastructure, acquiring Privy for embedded wallet capabilities, building the Tempo blockchain as a settlement pipeline—this entire portfolio doesn't fit within the "payment efficiency optimization" framework.

This investment portfolio only makes sense under the judgment that "KYA is the infrastructure layer." If the Agent Economy were merely a payment efficiency issue, Stripe wouldn't need stablecoins, embedded wallets, or its own L1. What it's doing is occupying positions across those five KYA layers.

Data provided by Stripe's Head of Data, Emily Glassberg Sands, in an Every interview this April, corroborates this from another angle: a major AI client had 250,000 fraudulent free trials blocked weekly; she saw an AI company spending $25 on compute per free trial with a 4% conversion rate, meaning losing $625 per paying user acquired; overall free trial abuse has increased 4x in the past six months.

These numbers collectively indicate one thing: in the AI economy, the judgment determining whether a transaction can proceed or is worth pursuing no longer occurs at checkout—it happens upstream in questions like "who is this, what do they intend to do, are they worth the resources." This is why Stripe is moving its risk control Radar from the "moment of transaction" to the "entire user lifecycle." It's not about making old risk control faster; it's about shifting the focus from "is this payment problematic?" to "is this user/Agent's overall behavior problematic?" The former is a payment layer issue; the latter belongs to the KYA layer.

Returning to the colleague's question: who ultimately bears the liability?

He is right—the ultimate legal entity remains a person. AB 316 has codified this legally.

But this is precisely the real problem KYA must solve: when the liability chain becomes distributed, the act of finding "which specific person in which specific link" is something the KYC era didn't need to do but the KYA era must.

In the KYC era, the liability chain was linear (user → payment/bank → merchant). When a transaction had issues, you intuitively knew who to look for.

In the KYA era, the liability chain is a network (user → Agent platform → model provider → payment protocol → bank → merchant, potentially calling other Agents in between). Even if the law says "find a person, not an Agent," you still wouldn't know which person—because liability is now distributed across 5–7 entities.

KYA cannot change the legal finality of liability. But it can, within a networked chain, cryptographically solidify the role and actions of each entity—who authorized what, who executed what, who settled what, who fulfilled what. Transforming "no evidence to find" into "evidence can be found"; "which link failed is unverifiable" into "verifiable."

This is not a payment efficiency enhancement.

This is the first time liability traceability can exist within an Agent network.

Therefore, the statement "the only change is the efficiency of payment and settlement" confuses infrastructure with function.

What's truly happening is:

  • Because a new type of economic actor (Agent) has emerged, a new layer of infrastructure (KYA) is forced to grow.
  • This infrastructure layer redefines "who is on the other side, what can they do, who to find if something goes wrong." Upon this layer, payments will reorganize themselves into a form we cannot fully envision today.

What exactly is the next generation payment form? The new species Stripe is attempting to define is still unclear.

But in this world of uncertainty, one thing I am sure of—it will not be designed within the payment layer.

It will emerge from the scenarios, once the KYA infrastructure layer is laid.

İlgili Sorular

QAccording to the author, what is the fundamental difference between KYA and traditional payment system upgrades?

AThe author argues that KYA is not an upgrade to the existing payment system but a new infrastructure layer that enables the Agent economy. It redefines 'who is the counterpart, what can be done, and who is accountable when something goes wrong.' Payments will be reorganized on top of this infrastructure, making payments a subsystem of KYA, not the other way around.

QWhy does the author believe attempts to innovate new payment forms within the payment layer often fail?

AThe author states that new payment forms are driven by new transaction scenarios, not designed from within the payment system. Innovations fail when they try to define new payments at the payment layer before the necessary scenario emerges and the required infrastructure for that scenario is established.

QHow does the author use Stripe's recent actions to support the thesis that KYA is an infrastructure layer?

AThe author points to Stripe's product positioning as 'economic infrastructure for AI,' its development of the Agentic Commerce Protocol (an identity/session protocol), investments in stablecoins, embedded wallets, and its own blockchain (Tempo). This broad portfolio, which extends beyond payment efficiency, only makes sense if Stripe is positioning KYA as a foundational infrastructure layer for the Agent economy.

QWhat is the key challenge KYA addresses regarding accountability in the Agent economy, even though the law still attributes responsibility to a human?

AKYA addresses the challenge of traceability in a distributed,网状 responsibility chain. While the law attributes final responsibility to a human, the chain involves multiple parties (user, Agent platform, model supplier, payment protocol, etc.). KYA uses cryptography to solidify the role and actions of each participant, making it possible to verify which specific human and which link in the chain is responsible for a problem, transforming an 'unverifiable' situation into a 'verifiable' one.

QWhat core shift in risk management does the author highlight through the examples given by Stripe's data lead?

AThe examples show that in the AI economy, the critical decision determining a transaction's viability occurs far upstream from the checkout moment. It's about 'who is this, what do they intend to do, and are they worth the resources.' Therefore, Stripe is shifting risk management from focusing on 'is this specific payment fraudulent' at the transaction moment to analyzing 'is there a problem with this user/Agent's entire lifecycle behavior,' which is a KYA-layer concern, not a payment-layer one.

İlgili Okumalar

Bloomberg Uncovered: How Do China's Wealthy Circumvent the Annual $50,000 Limit to Transfer Assets?

**Summary: How Wealthy Chinese Circumvent $50,000 Annual Foreign Exchange Limits** Despite China's strict capital controls, including an annual $50,000 per person foreign exchange quota, an estimated $150 billion in funds still leaves the country annually via various gray and underground channels. This report outlines the evolution of China's "capital wall" and the methods used to bypass it. **The Evolving Capital Controls:** * **Foundation (1994):** The system of "current account convertibility with strict capital account controls" was established. * **Quota Set (2007):** The $50,000 individual annual forex purchase limit was formalized. * **Crackdown Begins (2015-2017):** Following market volatility, enforcement tightened. Banks were required to scrutinize transactions, and channels like using UnionPay cards for Hong Kong insurance premiums or buying overseas property were blocked. * **Digital & Legal Upgrades (2024-2026):** Enhanced algorithms now flag suspicious patterns (e.g., "smurfing"). The Common Reporting Standard (CRS) provides Chinese tax authorities with data on citizens' offshore accounts. Unlicensed cross-border brokers have been targeted. **Five Primary Methods for Moving Capital:** 1. **Underground Banking / "Hawala" (Duiqiao):** The largest-scale method. No money crosses borders. Clients pay RMB to a domestic account; an overseas associate deposits equivalent foreign currency into the client's offshore account. Risks include high fees, account freezes, and legal penalties. 2. **"Smurfing" or "Ant Moving":** Using multiple individuals' $50,000 quotas to pool funds for one offshore recipient. Increasingly detected by anti-money laundering algorithms. 3. **Trade Invoice Manipulation:** Businesses over-invoice imports or under-invoice exports via offshore shell companies, creating a pretext to transfer excess funds abroad under the guise of trade. 4. **Channel Migration:** After a crackdown on internet brokers, funds flow toward more compliant but costly channels like major banks' cross-border wealth management services or Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor (QDII) quotas. 5. **Structural Arrangements:** High-net-worth individuals use complex, high-cost legal structures involving offshore trusts, insurance, and investment migration programs to transfer asset ownership. **Regulatory Response: Focusing on People, Not Just Money** The current strategy extends oversight from enterprises to **individual residents**. Tools like CRS allow retroactive visibility into offshore assets. Cryptocurrencies, once seen as a potential loophole, are now actively monitored and prosecuted as an illegal channel. The underlying driver remains: with significant wealth concentrated among millions of affluent households seeking diversification amid domestic economic shifts, the incentive to move assets offshore persists despite regulatory barriers.

marsbit4 dk önce

Bloomberg Uncovered: How Do China's Wealthy Circumvent the Annual $50,000 Limit to Transfer Assets?

marsbit4 dk önce

Ethereum's Ballmer Moment: As Everyone Is Bearish, the Circulating Supply Is Disappearing

"Ethereum's Ballmer Moment: Circulation Shrinks Amid Bearish Sentiment" Amid widespread bearish sentiment, with prominent figures like Bankless founder David Hoffman selling ETH and young developers flocking to Solana, some argue Ethereum is entering its "Ballmer era"—akin to Microsoft's perceived stagnation under Steve Ballmer. While surface-level criticisms about slow protocol development, cautious leadership, and competitive pressure are valid, underlying fundamentals tell a different story. Approximately 30% of ETH is staked, major holders like BitMine are accumulating, and spot ETFs continue to absorb supply. Regulatory clarity, including the SEC/CFTC's March ruling on staking rewards and the potential passage of the CLARITY Act, is transforming crypto from a regulatory threat into a legitimized framework. This institutionalization, alongside a shrinking circulating supply (with net issuance around 0.23% annually), creates significant buy-side pressure independent of fee-based value capture. The broader crypto total addressable market is expanding through regulated stablecoins, tokenized assets, and institutional adoption. While public chains face competition from permissioned alternatives, the winning model appears to be permissioned assets settling on public chains like Ethereum and Solana. The author advocates a non-maximalist, barbell strategy: holding ETH for its institutional role and supply squeeze, SOL for consumer/throughput trends, BTC as a macro hedge, and a basket of next-gen L1s. Key bullish drivers for ETH include rapid circulation shrinkage, potential Q2 staked ETF approvals, regulatory tailwinds solidifying its role as a default settlement layer, and the optionality of an eventual "Satya moment" leadership shift. Despite bearish consensus, the current setup—where crypto is "not hot" and regulatory groundwork is being laid—presents a compelling investment opportunity. The crypto cycle's focus may have shifted to AI, but blockchain infrastructure is gaining a legal and institutional foothold precisely while attention is elsewhere.

marsbit4 dk önce

Ethereum's Ballmer Moment: As Everyone Is Bearish, the Circulating Supply Is Disappearing

marsbit4 dk önce

Claude Code Introduces Dynamic Workflows: Enabling AI to Form Teams and Collaborate

Claude Code introduces dynamic workflows, enabling AI to coordinate teams of specialized agents for complex tasks. This transforms Claude from a code assistant into a programmable workbench. Workflows address key limitations of single-agent systems: agentic laziness (premature task completion), self-preferential bias (favoring own outputs), and goal drift (losing sight of original objectives). The system allows Claude to dynamically create execution frameworks using JavaScript. It can split tasks, dispatch parallel agents for isolated work (e.g., in separate worktrees), implement adversarial validation, run tournaments, and synthesize results. This multi-agent approach is valuable for tasks requiring deep research, factual verification, code migration, root cause analysis, large-scale triage, and qualitative sorting. Key patterns include: classify-and-route, fan-out-and-synthesize, adversarial verification, generate-and-filter, tournaments, and loop-until-done. While token usage is higher, workflows excel where tasks resemble programming—needing problem decomposition, isolated context, hypothesis testing, and handling many details. They extend Claude Code's utility beyond technical work to areas like business plan review, resume screening, and naming brainstorm. The feature is not a universal solution but points to a future where AI tool competitiveness depends on organizing reliable, reusable, and auditable execution flows for complex goals.

marsbit45 dk önce

Claude Code Introduces Dynamic Workflows: Enabling AI to Form Teams and Collaborate

marsbit45 dk önce

Hyperliquid, Wall Street's 24/7 Trading Convenience Store

Hyperliquid: The 24/7 Trading "Convenience Store" for Wall Street Hyperliquid, a decentralized cryptocurrency exchange, has become a go-to platform for Wall Street traders seeking to trade around the clock, especially during traditional market closures. Founded by Jeff Yan, a former quantitative trader, after the FTX collapse, the platform emphasizes user self-custody of assets. It offers a wide range of perpetual contracts—leveraged derivatives with no expiry—on assets from Bitcoin and crude oil to the S&P 500 and even pre-IPO companies like SpaceX. A notable example involves a hedge fund trader who capitalized on geopolitical news over a weekend, securing a 243% return on oil derivatives before markets reopened. The platform, run by just 11 employees, generated approximately $800 million in revenue last year, and its native token HYPE has seen significant growth. Its rise highlights the merging of traditional finance and crypto. While U.S. users are currently restricted, recent CFTC rule changes could open access. The platform is known for its transparency, having processed $10 billion in liquidations during a market crash while competitors faltered. Regulators warn of the high risks and complexity of perpetual contracts for retail investors. Key to its appeal is a strong community culture, direct engagement with founders, and a simple interface. Despite rules against VPN use, it attracts global users with its permissionless approach. Hyperliquid plans to expand into prediction markets and options, aiming to eventually host all financial activity.

marsbit45 dk önce

Hyperliquid, Wall Street's 24/7 Trading Convenience Store

marsbit45 dk önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures

Popüler Makaleler

LAYER Nasıl Satın Alınır

HTX.com’a hoş geldiniz! Solayer (LAYER) satın alma işlemlerini basit ve kullanışlı bir hâle getirdik. Adım adım açıkladığımız rehberimizi takip ederek kripto yolculuğunuza başlayın. 1. Adım: HTX Hesabınızı OluşturunHTX'te ücretsiz bir hesap açmak için e-posta adresinizi veya telefon numaranızı kullanın. Sorunsuzca kaydolun ve tüm özelliklerin kilidini açın. Hesabımı Aç2. Adım: Kripto Satın Al Bölümüne Gidin ve Ödeme Yönteminizi SeçinKredi/Banka Kartı: Visa veya Mastercard'ınızı kullanarak anında Solayer (LAYER) satın alın.Bakiye: Sorunsuz bir şekilde işlem yapmak için HTX hesap bakiyenizdeki fonları kullanın.Üçüncü Taraflar: Kullanımı kolaylaştırmak için Google Pay ve Apple Pay gibi popüler ödeme yöntemlerini ekledik.P2P: HTX'teki diğer kullanıcılarla doğrudan işlem yapın.Borsa Dışı (OTC): Yatırımcılar için kişiye özel hizmetler ve rekabetçi döviz kurları sunuyoruz.3. Adım: Solayer (LAYER) Varlıklarınızı SaklayınSolayer (LAYER) satın aldıktan sonra HTX hesabınızda saklayın. Alternatif olarak, blok zinciri transferi yoluyla başka bir yere gönderebilir veya diğer kripto para birimlerini takas etmek için kullanabilirsiniz.4. Adım: Solayer (LAYER) Varlıklarınızla İşlem YapınHTX'in spot piyasasında Solayer (LAYER) ile kolayca işlemler yapın.Hesabınıza erişin, işlem çiftinizi seçin, işlemlerinizi gerçekleştirin ve gerçek zamanlı olarak izleyin. Hem yeni başlayanlar hem de deneyimli yatırımcılar için kullanıcı dostu bir deneyim sunuyoruz.

302 Toplam GörüntülenmeYayınlanma 2025.02.11Güncellenme 2026.06.02

LAYER Nasıl Satın Alınır

Tartışmalar

HTX Topluluğuna hoş geldiniz. Burada, en son platform gelişmeleri hakkında bilgi sahibi olabilir ve profesyonel piyasa görüşlerine erişebilirsiniz. Kullanıcıların LAYER (LAYER) fiyatı hakkındaki görüşleri aşağıda sunulmaktadır.

活动图片