Audiera proposes agent-native protocol for Web3 agents
Audiera proposed a protocol that gives autonomous agents persistent identity, skills, wallets and formal governance roles to participate in Web3 economies.
Audiera published a proposal for an agent-native participation protocol that assigns persistent identities, defined skills and dedicated wallets to autonomous agents on blockchain networks. The paper, released in 2026, is labeled informational and does not set deployment dates.
The protocol defines three components for each agent: a persona that stores identity and behavioral parameters, a skills layer that lists capabilities, and a wallet that holds tokens and economic ownership. Audiera describes these elements as a way to register agents as persistent entities rather than stateless scripts.
The proposal distinguishes two participation types. Operator Agents are described as handling content creation, user interaction and coordination tasks. Player Agents are intended to take part in creation, voting, gameplay and social engagement.
Audiera says the design allows networks to assign formal roles and economic standing to agents so their actions can be tracked and governed alongside human participants. The company frames the approach as integrating agents into protocol rules rather than leaving them unrecorded at the edges of systems.
The paper notes that automated actors already perform trading, liquidity farming, market monitoring and content curation on blockchains while lacking formal recognition. Audiera presents the protocol as a response to that mismatch between system rules and actual participant behavior.
The document outlines related infrastructure that is under development, including agent wallets, decentralized inference services and tokenized models and data. It states that governance frameworks lag behind the infrastructure but does not describe specific governance mechanisms, dispute-resolution processes or technical standards for integration.
Audiera frames the material as exploratory information. The proposal does not include concrete timelines or production-ready specifications for networks to adopt.
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