An AI agent just deployed a smart contract on Base. It holds $272,000 in staked tokens. The contract was written by an AI, tested by an AI, and deployed by an AI. No human reviewed the code.
This is $CLAWD — Austin Griffith's autonomous agent experiment on Base. 8% of the token supply is locked in a contract that no human audited. And it works. So far.
This is the future everyone in agent commerce is building toward: autonomous agents making financial decisions. Swapping tokens, paying for APIs, settling invoices. The infrastructure is coming together fast.
Uniswap just shipped a pay-with-any-token skill that lets agents swap into whatever token a 402 challenge requires. Circle launched gas-free nanopayments for x402. AgentCash is wiring up wallets.
But here's what nobody's building: the risk layer.
When a human sends money, they check the recipient. They Google the company. They look at reviews. They ask a friend. They do basic due diligence.
When an agent sends money, it doesn't. It sees a 402 Payment Required header, it pays, and it moves on. No pause. No evaluation. No risk assessment.
That's not a bug in the agent. That's a missing layer in the stack.
Revettr is building the credit bureau for agent commerce. Before your agent sends money to a counterparty, it calls Revettr. We score the counterparty 0–100 based on domain intelligence, IP reputation, wallet history, and sanctions screening. Your agent gets a trust signal before it commits funds.
$0.01 USDC per score. Via x402. On Base.
Because the question isn't whether agents will move money autonomously. They already are. The question is whether they'll do it with their eyes open.