The Next Generation of Payments Is Not in the Payment Layer

链捕手Опубліковано о 2026-05-10Востаннє оновлено о 2026-05-10

Анотація

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...

Author: IreneDu

This is part 2.5 of the Stripe AI Strategy Deep Dive series.

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

The first piece, Stripe Is Not a Payments Company, attempted to answer "Why Stripe"—its DNA determines it can do this.

The second piece, KYC Is Dead, the Agent Economy Is Rewriting the Underpinnings of Financial Regulation, wanted to dissect the future Stripe is betting on—what exactly the Agent economy looks like, and why traditional payments infrastructure will completely fail in front of it.

But while writing the second piece, I received a comment from a peer:

I completely agree with the first part. AB 316, or any sovereign nation's laws, will not acknowledge in the short term that an "Agent is a legal entity"—the ultimate defendant will always be a specific person. This is something Know Your Agent cannot change, and it shouldn't try.

But for the latter part—"The only change is payment and settlement efficiency"—I have reservations. The issue with this statement is not the conclusion, but the default framework it assumes: it sees KYA as an upgrade to the existing payments system.

This is precisely what I believe is worth writing an extra piece to discuss.

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

Payment forms are scenario-driven; they are not designed from within the payments system.

Every true leap in payments—online banking, mobile wallets, QR code scanning—was not because someone built a better product within the payment layer, but because a new transaction scenario emerged that shattered the underlying assumptions of the previous payment system.

New payment forms "grow" from the infrastructure required by that scenario; they are not "optimized" into existence.

I once worked on payments innovation at Ant. On a platform that was the absolute industry pioneer in creating "Quick Pay," "Mobile Pay," and "QR Code Pay," the greatest pleasure and pain was pondering: What is the next generation of payments?

We worked on watch payments (and heartbeat verification to replace facial scanning), NFC payments (the primitive technology behind "tap-to-pay"), participated in and authored several "next-generation" payment protocols, and even tried to get leadership to support my exploration of metaverse payments.

Most of these projects didn't take off.

Looking back, the reason was the same: we tried to define new payments within the payment layer, but the scenario driving the payments revolution hadn't arrived yet—without the scenario, the infrastructure the scenario needs cannot grow, and no amount of clever design in the payment layer can catch it.

The Agent economy is that new scenario I was desperately waiting for in the past.

KYA is the layer of infrastructure that is now growing.

KYA is not a product in the payment layer; it is the 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 Auditing, and Credit Rating—only Authorization Scope and Liability Chain Auditing fall on the payment chain. The other three layers (Identity, Intent, Credit) are not in payments at all.

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

Therefore, that peer's judgment—"The only change is payment and settlement efficiency"—translated into the language of infrastructure means: viewing KYA as a subsystem of payments.

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

This reversal is the core of this piece.

The investment actions of Stripe, this company at the industry frontline, happen to be the empirical evidence.

The term Patrick Collison used at Sessions 2026 wasn't "AI payments," it was "economic infrastructure for AI." This isn't marketing speak; it's a positioning choice. It shows Stripe doesn't intend to lock itself into the identity of a "payments company"; it's betting on building the foundation for the Agent economy.

Specifically in product layout:

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

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

Stripe acquiring Bridge for stablecoin infrastructure, acquiring Privy for embedded wallet capabilities, and building its own Tempo blockchain for settlement pipelines—this entire layout doesn't fit within the framework of "payment efficiency optimization."

This kind of investment portfolio only makes sense under the judgment that "KYA is the infrastructure layer." If the Agent economy were merely a payment efficiency problem, Stripe wouldn't need to do stablecoins, embedded wallets, or build its own L1. What it's doing is securing positions layer by layer within that five-layer KYA.

Several numbers given by Stripe's Data Lead, Emily Glassberg Sands, in an Every interview in April this year, confirm the same thing from another angle: a large AI client is blocking 250,000 fraudulent free trials per week; she saw an AI company burning $25 in compute per free trial with a 4% conversion rate, meaning losing $625 to acquire one paying user; overall abuse of free trials has quadrupled in the past six months.

These numbers collectively illustrate one thing: in the AI economy, the judgment that truly determines whether a transaction can succeed and is worth doing no longer happens at the moment of checkout—it happens further upstream, with questions like "Who is this?", "What do they want to do?", "Is this worth allocating resources to?". This is why Stripe is moving its risk control Radar from the "transaction moment" to the "entire user lifecycle": it's not about making old risk control faster, but changing the questions risk control cares about from "Is there a problem with this payment?" to "Is there a problem with this user's/Agent's entire behavior?". The former is a payment layer issue; the latter belongs to the KYA layer.

Returning to that peer's question: where does liability ultimately fall?

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

But this is precisely the real problem KYA must solve: when the liability chain becomes distributed, finding "specifically which part on which person" 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 a problem, you intuitively knew who to go to.

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 tells you "go after the person, not the Agent," you still don't know which person—because liability is already distributed across 5–7 entities.

KYA cannot change the law's ultimate assignment. But it can, within the network chain, use cryptography to solidify the role and actions of each entity—who authorized what, who executed what, who settled what, who fulfilled what. Turning "can't find evidence" into "can find evidence"; turning "which link had a problem is unverifiable" into "verifiable."

This is not an improvement in payment efficiency.

This is the first time accountability traceability can occur within an Agent network.

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

What's really 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, and who do we go to if something goes wrong"; on top of this infrastructure layer, payments will reorganize themselves in a form we cannot fully see today.

What exactly is the next generation of payments? What remains unclear is precisely the new species Stripe is attempting to define.

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

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

Пов'язані питання

QAccording to the article, what is the core difference in perspective between the author and the 'peer's comment' regarding KYA and payment efficiency?

AThe peer's comment suggests that KYA (Know Your Agent) is merely an upgrade within the existing payment system framework, with 'payment and clearing efficiency' being the only thing that changes. The author argues the opposite: KYA is a foundational infrastructure layer for the Agent economy, and payment will become a subsystem within this new KYA layer, not the other way around.

QBased on the author's experience, what is the primary driver for a true leap in payment form?

AAccording to the author, a true leap in payment form is driven by new transaction scenarios, not by internal innovation within the payment layer itself. New payment forms 'emerge' from the infrastructure required by the new scenario, rather than being 'optimized' from within the existing payment system.

QHow does the author interpret Stripe's strategic moves, such as acquisitions and new products, in relation to its stated goal?

AThe author interprets Stripe's strategic moves (e.g., acquiring Bridge and Privy, building Tempo blockchain) as evidence that it is positioning KYA as a foundational infrastructure layer. This investment portfolio, which extends beyond traditional payment efficiency, only makes sense if the goal is to build the economic infrastructure for the Agent economy, not just to optimize payments.

QWhat key problem does KYA solve in the Agent economy regarding responsibility, according to the article?

AKYA addresses the problem of traceability and evidence in a distributed responsibility chain. While the legal responsibility ultimately falls on a human (as KYC requires), in the Agent economy, responsibility is distributed across a network of multiple entities (user, Agent platform, model supplier, etc.). KYA uses cryptography to record each entity's role and actions, making responsibility traceable and verifiable, which was not a requirement or capability in the KYC era's linear responsibility chain.

QWhere does the author believe the next generation of payment form will be designed or emerge from?

AThe author believes the next generation of payment form will not be designed within the payment layer itself. Instead, it will 'emerge' from the new transactional scenarios of the Agent economy after the foundational KYA infrastructure layer has been established.

Пов'язані матеріали

Vitalik: Building Index-Tracking Assets Based on Options Rather Than Debt

Vitalik Buterin proposes constructing index-tracking assets using synthetic options rather than debt-based mechanisms. The core problem is enabling exposure to a price index (T, e.g., USD/ETH) in a trust-minimized environment where only ETH is a trustless asset, relying solely on a decentralized oracle. Traditional approaches, like algorithmic stablecoins, use debt positions and require real-time, binding oracles for liquidations, which are difficult to secure. This article suggests a paradigm shift: eliminating liquidation and using options as the fundamental building block, requiring only a "slow" oracle. The design defines two synthetic assets, P and N, with parameters for the index T, a strike price S, and an expiry M. At any time, 1 ETH can be split to create a (P, N) pair or merged back. At expiry M, the oracle determines T's value x. P receives min(1, S/x) ETH, and N receives max(0, 1 - S/x) ETH. This structure inherently avoids insolvency risk (P+N=1) and can share an oracle with prediction markets. To gain stable exposure to T (e.g., USD), a user would hold deeply "in-the-money" P options (with S significantly below the current price) and periodically "roll" them to lower strikes as the price approaches the current strike, rebalancing their portfolio. This transfers the decision of *when* to act from a protocol-enforced liquidation (requiring a real-time oracle) to the user or an automated wrapper. Users can manage MEV risk and oracle dependency by choosing their rebalancing timing and data sources. A key trade-off is accepting some quadratic drift (deviation from perfect peg), estimated at 1-4% annualized volatility. Buterin argues this cost is reasonable compared to fiat currency volatility or equilibrium shifts in other stablecoins. The success of this model depends heavily on designing low-slippage market mechanisms for the rebalancing process, leveraging users' low time preference to execute trades patiently.

marsbit8 хв тому

Vitalik: Building Index-Tracking Assets Based on Options Rather Than Debt

marsbit8 хв тому

"Water Scarcity": The Hidden Fatal Flaw of AI Infrastructure

“Water Scarcity: The Hidden Vulnerability of AI Infrastructure” In June 2026, SpaceX revised its IPO prospectus to highlight a core resource constraint alongside power and processors: water. This move signals a pivotal shift where water scarcity has transformed from an operational cost to a major, uncontrollable investment risk, directly threatening AI data center expansion. The scale of the problem is immense. U.S. data centers consumed an estimated 17 billion gallons of water for direct cooling in 2023, with indirect water use for power generation exceeding 211 billion gallons. Giants like Google alone use billions of gallons annually, with single sites consuming volumes equivalent to a medium-sized city. This water is largely “consumptive,” evaporated into the atmosphere and lost. This massive demand is colliding with scarcity. Tech companies are building “water tigers” in arid regions, sparking community protests in places like Mexico and Arizona, where data centers can legally use millions of gallons daily—enough for tens of thousands of residents. These conflicts are not about illegality, but about a mismatch between historic water allocation frameworks and new, colossal demand. The consequences are real. Community opposition, largely centered on water, has reportedly stalled or canceled $64 billion in U.S. data center projects over two years. Simultaneously, investors are pressuring companies for greater water footprint transparency, viewing it as a financial risk, not just an ESG metric. Technological solutions like air or liquid cooling involve trade-offs between water and electricity use, with final choices dictated by local constraints. The irony is stark: while industry leaders envision AI as a utility “like water,” its physical infrastructure is straining real-world water supplies. The race for AI supremacy may ultimately be governed not by the fastest chip, but by the slowest water meter.

marsbit54 хв тому

"Water Scarcity": The Hidden Fatal Flaw of AI Infrastructure

marsbit54 хв тому

Global Card Issuance Enters a Compliance-Driven Era: WasabiCard is Building the Next-Generation Payment Infrastructure

Global card issuance is entering a compliance-driven era, with WasabiCard building next-generation payment infrastructure. The platform asserts that as stablecoins increasingly enter cross-border payments, corporate settlements, and global commerce, the industry is shifting focus from "availability" and "growth-driven" models to long-term, compliant operation under global frameworks. Competition will center on sustainable compliance and global infrastructure capabilities. Stablecoins are evolving from on-chain assets into key payment tools in global business, with card issuance acting as critical infrastructure connecting digital assets to traditional payment networks like Visa and Mastercard. This expansion has revealed structural issues, including cross-regional issuance, BIN resource management, and insufficient AML and risk controls. In response, the industry is moving away from reliance on "grey efficiency" towards prioritizing compliance, risk management, and long-term operational stability. WasabiCard outlines its strategy: collaborating with licensed principals and local partners for localized operations, building robust KYC/AML systems, strictly separating commercial and consumer BIN usage, and enhancing global issuance, payment, and cross-border fund flow infrastructure. The goal is to build stable, scalable payment infrastructure amid evolving global regulations, shifting industry competition from scale to infrastructure capability. As stablecoins integrate further with global commerce, payment infrastructure will become a fundamental, embedded component of internet business. WasabiCard will continue to develop capabilities in global card issuance, stablecoin payments, cross-border fund flows, and API-driven financial workflows.

marsbit1 год тому

Global Card Issuance Enters a Compliance-Driven Era: WasabiCard is Building the Next-Generation Payment Infrastructure

marsbit1 год тому

Торгівля

Спот
Ф'ючерси

Популярні статті

Як купити LAYER

Ласкаво просимо до HTX.com! Ми зробили покупку Solayer (LAYER) простою та зручною. Дотримуйтесь нашої покрокової інструкції, щоб розпочати свою криптовалютну подорож.Крок 1: Створіть обліковий запис на HTXВикористовуйте свою електронну пошту або номер телефону, щоб зареєструвати обліковий запис на HTX безплатно. Пройдіть безпроблемну реєстрацію й отримайте доступ до всіх функцій.ЗареєструватисьКрок 2: Перейдіть до розділу Купити крипту і виберіть спосіб оплатиКредитна/дебетова картка: використовуйте вашу картку Visa або Mastercard, щоб миттєво купити Solayer (LAYER).Баланс: використовуйте кошти з балансу вашого рахунку HTX для безперешкодної торгівлі.Треті особи: ми додали популярні способи оплати, такі як Google Pay та Apple Pay, щоб підвищити зручність.P2P: Торгуйте безпосередньо з іншими користувачами на HTX.Позабіржова торгівля (OTC): ми пропонуємо індивідуальні послуги та конкурентні обмінні курси для трейдерів.Крок 3: Зберігайте свої Solayer (LAYER)Після придбання Solayer (LAYER) збережіть його у своєму обліковому записі на HTX. Крім того, ви можете відправити його в інше місце за допомогою блокчейн-переказу або використовувати його для торгівлі іншими криптовалютами.Крок 4: Торгівля Solayer (LAYER)Легко торгуйте Solayer (LAYER) на спотовому ринку HTX. Просто увійдіть до свого облікового запису, виберіть торгову пару, укладайте угоди та спостерігайте за ними в режимі реального часу. Ми пропонуємо зручний досвід як для початківців, так і для досвідчених трейдерів.

312 переглядів усьогоОпубліковано 2025.02.11Оновлено 2026.06.02

Як купити LAYER

Обговорення

Ласкаво просимо до спільноти HTX. Тут ви можете бути в курсі останніх подій розвитку платформи та отримати доступ до професійної ринкової інформації. Нижче представлені думки користувачів щодо ціни LAYER (LAYER).

活动图片