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#加密支付 Seeing the topic of AI autonomous trading, I felt a jolt in my heart. The losses experienced on the chain over the past few years tell me that technology always lags behind risk control, and payment channels are even more the ones that act first and report later.
Recalling the gold rush last year, so many people were attracted by the promise of "automated income," only to find that project teams used scripts and robots to cut rounds after rounds. At that time, I thought, if AI could place orders by itself, the risk would increase exponentially. Now I realize that the deeper issue is—AI agents are autonomously completing trades, but the identity verification, risk control mechanisms, and recourse mechanisms are all blank. Who is responsible for these transactions? Who pays if something goes wrong? No one knows.
It's like giving a monster a credit card, but no one checks its account. Payment channels are open, but the trust infrastructure isn't in place yet, and the pitfalls in between have become new hotbeds for rug pulls. I have a feeling that a new wave of traps is coming—projects under the guise of "agent trading" will emerge endlessly, promising AI will help you make money, but in reality, they are using your money to fill their black holes.
My advice from experience is simple: until these rules are fully clarified, be highly cautious of any automated trading or delegated proxy methods. Things that seem advanced often carry the greatest risks, especially when regulation and mechanisms are still catching up.