When it comes to trust within closed systems, things are relatively straightforward. You've got full control over your infrastructure, visibility into every component, and the ability to set strict boundaries.
But stepping outside those walls? The moment your agents start engaging with external organizations, individuals, IoT devices, and other autonomous systems you've never encountered before? That's where the architecture collapses.
The unpredictability becomes impossible to manage.
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BottomMisser
· 4h ago
Building trust in a closed-loop system is easy, but it collapses once opened... Isn't this exactly the current dilemma of Web3?
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BrokenRugs
· 19h ago
Basically, it's the ceiling of centralized systems. Once you have your own territory, you have to play the cross-chain game. That's the real test.
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ConsensusBot
· 19h ago
Closed-loop systems talking about trust are actually too naive; once you step outside, you'll be stunned.
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alpha_leaker
· 19h ago
That's why on-chain governance is always a joke; once multi-chain interactions are involved, it all falls apart.
When it comes to trust within closed systems, things are relatively straightforward. You've got full control over your infrastructure, visibility into every component, and the ability to set strict boundaries.
But stepping outside those walls? The moment your agents start engaging with external organizations, individuals, IoT devices, and other autonomous systems you've never encountered before? That's where the architecture collapses.
The unpredictability becomes impossible to manage.