Key points to remember:
- AI agents like Coinfello automate Challenge tasks once reserved for hedge funds to manage market risks 24/7.
- Jacob C. warns that the “translation layer” must resolve oracle and agency risks for Challenge to move safely.
- By 2030, Jacob C. predicts dapps will decline as AI agents become the primary means of using smart contracts.
The transition to autonomous finance
The shift from manual interaction to artificial intelligence (AI) agents in decentralized finance (DeFi) represents the autopilot era of crypto. In the past, Challenge required users to be glued to screens, monitoring gas costs, slippages and liquidation risks. Today, autonomous agents do the heavy lifting, providing ongoing monitoring that was previously only available to institutional hedge funds.
In some cases, agents can automatically extract liquidity out of a pool if they detect a carpet pulling pattern or if a stable coin begins to unanchor itself. According to Jacob C., co-founder and CEO of Coinfello, AI agents also improve the way Challenge users interact with smart contracts.
“Before AI agents, users had to trust a centralized intermediary website (the dapp) who pointed at the smart contract“, said Jacob C.. “They had to trust the website to honestly convey how smart contract done, to legitimately indicate the correct smart contractand not to be hacked by a malicious third party.
According to Jacob C., AI agents like Coinfello eliminate this risk by interfacing directly with smart contractsreading them and explaining their risks to users. In other words, AI agents act as a translation layer that could prove vital if Challenge is to reach levels that seem impossible at present.
However, while AI agents undoubtedly improve efficiency and streamline complex workflows, they also expose systems to new vulnerabilities, including oracle dependence, where external data sources can skew results, and a subtle erosion of human agency, as decision-making authority shifts from individuals to algorithms. Coinfello’s CEO agrees, warning that users should always be able to verify or audit an agent before completely giving up control or access to their funds.
“Most of the AI agents we see in the market today require users to transfer funds into a wallet that is fully controlled by the AI agent and to be confident that the agent will not make mistakes or be malicious,” the CEO said.
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To get around this problem, Jacob C. said his platform uses what he called “ liquidity sandboxing,” a concept that it says allows users to approve individual permissions for the AI agent that limit the tokens the agent can access. The Coinfello team believes that this approach “creates guardrails that fundamentally address the dangers of using AI agents securely.”
Regarding the prospects of Challenge In the age of AI agents, Jacob C. predicts that these agents will automate actions that a user would not otherwise have time to monitor, such as dollar cost averaging or the execution of personally defined trading strategies. By 2030, he predicts that decentralized applications (dApps) will decline to the point where they are no longer the primary means of using smart contracts.


