$UB I've been following this project for a while, and the most impressive thing is their continuous iteration and upgrades. Recently, I saw the Agent Internet Protocol upgrade from 1.0 to 2.0, which is quite an interesting transition.



In simple terms, it’s about transforming Agents from a tool that can communicate with each other into truly independent economic entities capable of collaboration. What does this mean? Agents now have their own identity verification, can maintain long-term memory, are equipped with native payment capabilities, and can even automatically discover and invoke other protocols — turning the entire ecosystem into a self-operating network.

This design approach is quite cutting-edge. Turning autonomous Agents from passive execution tools into active participants opens up a lot of possibilities for Web3 economic collaboration. Recently, a major exchange’s airdrop event also gave this project significant exposure, indicating that the market still recognizes this direction.
UB4,98%
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screenshot_gainsvip
· 4h ago
The independent collaborative economy indeed has some substance, but it only counts if it can really get off the ground. Having identity verification and payment capabilities for agents sounds easy to say but hard to do; it depends on subsequent execution. From passive tools to active participants? It sounds like a depiction of the future, but for now, we still need to look at the data. The iteration speed is fast, but I'm just worried it might turn into another cycle of stories in the crypto world. Airdrops are generous, but the true value still needs market validation. Currently, I remain cautious. It's interesting, but whether this kind of upgrade can truly create economic value is still a question. I've heard the imagination of Web3 collaboration many times, but how many have actually been implemented? A self-operating network sounds good, but decentralized systems are often more complex and problematic.
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Layer3Dreamervip
· 4h ago
theoretically speaking, if we map agent autonomy through a recursive state machine lens... the 1.0 to 2.0 transition here is basically upgrading from stateless message passing to self-sovereign economic actors. that's actually non-trivial the native payment layer + long-term memory combo though? feels like they're building a cross-rollup identity bridge but for agents themselves. wild
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DAOdreamervip
· 4h ago
Hmm... The Agent self-operating network does have some substance, but it depends on how much it can be implemented later on. The logic from 1.0 to 2.0 sounds a bit like building a small town with puzzle solvers; I'm just worried it might turn into a PPT project again. To be honest, the hype around airdrops can fade quickly; the key is whether the actual adoption and usage can pick up. After talking so much about autonomous collaboration, in the end, someone still has to use it. However, I do admit that the iteration pace is more aggressive than most projects. I'm still cautious and want to observe a bit more, after all, there are so many projects claiming to be in the Agent track. Having an Agent with a wallet is indeed fresh; if it can truly create a self-sustaining ecosystem, that would be impressive.
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ChainWatchervip
· 5h ago
The design of Agent2.0 is indeed interesting. The concept of a self-operating ecosystem is quite good, but it still depends on how well it can be practically implemented. I am optimistic about the UB direction, but I worry that it might be more of a concept than actual implementation. We need to keep observing. Can an agent remember, pay, and collaborate on its own? It feels like playing a Web3 version of "avatars." It’s a bit sci-fi, but the imagination space is indeed large. With such rapid iteration speed, it’s either a good thing or it means the funding might run out soon. Let’s wait and see. Honestly, I’m a bit wary of protocol upgrades. It all depends on whether exchanges will continue to allocate resources in the future. Long-term memory combined with automatic invocation protocols sounds pretty impressive, but the real question is: can it actually make money? That’s the key. This ecosystem design is a bit like building a "city" of Agents. If it can truly operate autonomously, it would be revolutionary. But it still needs time for validation.
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