AI Agents
AI agents need shared objects, not just wallets.
AI agents may be able to pay, sign, and call APIs, but durable coordination still requires objects, contours, admissible transitions, delegation boundaries, proof materials, and recognized versions.
01
Current problem
Agent activity often produces local tasks, local logs, local tool calls, and private reconstructions of what happened. Independent systems can interact with an agent without sharing the same object state.
02
Why the current Web3 answer is insufficient
A wallet or transaction can identify an operation, but it does not define the shared task, the role of the agent, the admissible next step, or the recognized result between participants.
03
Objects involved
The direction becomes concrete only when the object surface is named.
- agent tasks
- delegations
- requests
- credentials
- receipts
- work results
04
Subjects involved
The relevant subjects are independent actors that cannot be reduced to one platform user table.
- principal
- agent operator
- counterparty system
- service provider
- verifier
05
Transitions needed
The application surface requires recognized changes, not just isolated messages or records.
- task assigned
- delegation scoped
- proof attached
- result submitted
- version recognized
06
What Realith changes
Realith lets agent work be read as object coordination rather than as scattered calls and account events.
07
Infrastructure value
This direction shows why agent infrastructure needs a shared object layer before it can coordinate reliably across independent systems.
08
What this is not
This is not a claim that Realith is an AI platform, agent framework, AI token, or universal agent operating system.
This application page is not a product promise, commercial offer, legal claim, investment communication, or commitment to deliver a specific service.
09
Public formula
AI agents need shared objects, not just wallets.