Key Highlights
- World’s new AgentKit developer platform now incorporates Coinbase’s x402 protocol, developed alongside Cloudflare
- The integration enables AI agents to carry verifiable cryptographic credentials proving human authorization
- Erik Reppel from Coinbase emphasized the technology positions agents as “legitimate economic participants” instead of questionable automated systems
- Brian Armstrong, Coinbase’s founder, anticipates AI agents will outnumber humans in online commerce transactions imminently
- Coinbase unveiled an AI agent payment wallet on Base network in February for automated transaction processing
The x402 protocol developed by Coinbase addresses a critical challenge in artificial intelligence deployment: establishing authentic human authorization behind autonomous agents.
World, the identity verification platform supported by Sam Altman, introduced AgentKit on Tuesday—a development framework utilizing x402, an open-source protocol jointly engineered by Coinbase and Cloudflare. This beta release enables AI agents to transmit cryptographic evidence confirming human verification backing their operations.
The x402 architecture functions by integrating stablecoin micropayment capabilities into fundamental web communication protocols, enabling autonomous software and AI systems to execute transactions independently without continuous human intervention.
According to Erik Reppel, engineering director for Coinbase Developer Platform and x402’s creator, the relationship is straightforward: “Payments represent the ‘how’ in agentic commerce, while identity establishes the ‘who.'”
Coinbase maintains an active position in this ecosystem. Reppel explained that platforms implementing the technology can decline transactions lacking human verification credentials. “As the seller, you can just say, ‘This doesn’t have proof of human attached to it, so I’m going to reject the payment.'”
Coinbase’s Strategic Vision for Agent-Driven Commerce
Brian Armstrong, Coinbase’s founder, has projected that AI agents will surpass human participants in online transaction volume “very soon.”
Former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao offered an even bolder forecast, suggesting agents will execute one million times more payments than humans, “and they will use crypto.”
This emerging landscape explains Coinbase‘s accelerated development in autonomous payment infrastructure.
The company introduced a specialized AI agent wallet on its Base blockchain in February, engineered to process payments while securing private keys within trusted execution environments.
The x402 framework adds another dimension. Beyond simply facilitating agent payments, it provides platforms with tools to authenticate transaction sources.
Addressing the Bot Authentication Challenge
Currently, digital platforms struggle to distinguish between authorized AI agents representing legitimate users and malicious bot networks exploiting systems.
DC Builder, a research engineer at World Foundation, illustrated the issue concretely: “Think of Ticketmaster: if you delegate an agent the ability to book tickets, you can spawn 100,000 tickets.”
AgentKit resolves this vulnerability by connecting multiple AI agents to a single verified human identity through zero-knowledge proof technology. Platforms can then enforce restrictions at the identity level—limiting free trials, imposing daily transaction caps—irrespective of agent quantity.
Recently, a federal court issued an injunction preventing AI company Perplexity’s Comet browser from executing purchases on Amazon for users, demonstrating that regulatory scrutiny around autonomous commerce is intensifying.
Reppel articulated the fundamental challenge Coinbase aims to resolve: “What we need are robust, open ways of understanding which is which — being able to tell when you’re talking to an AI, a human, or a specific human’s AI.”
World’s AgentKit presently employs iris-scanning Orb technology for biometric authentication, with expansion plans including NFC-enabled passport verification and government-issued identification. The platform has already authenticated nearly 18 million individuals spanning over 160 countries.


