"Commercialization" and "chainization".

Written by: Haotian

After looking at the optimization points of ELIZA V1 and V2 frameworks, I feel that there has been great progress, especially in unified Agent wallet management, unified message management, and improved scalability. But to be honest, at this stage, the ELIZA framework is still at the optimization level of the basic development architecture, and has not significantly expanded its "imagination space". I personally look forward to the possibility of its "commercialization" and "chainization" in the future:

1) A complete set of agent interoperability protocols, including agent basic message protocol (format standardization, routing mechanism, state synchronization, etc.), agent dialogue interaction protocol (multi-agent dialogue management, context information storage and state synchronization, etc.), agent resource sharing mechanism (computing, storage and other resource allocation), agent task allocation mechanism (intention understanding, task splitting, progress synchronization, aggregation rules, etc.), agent identity and permission management layer (identity authentication, absorption scoring system, permission management mechanism, etc.);

2) A set of Tokenomics token economic protocols, including the definition of governance tokens (ai16z or ELIZA?), agent participant incentive mechanisms (agent developer incentives, data contribution incentives, computing resource supply rewards, verification node rewards, etc.), gas economic system (agent call fees, memory storage resource fees, cross-chain operation fees, deflation burning rules, handling fee distribution mechanism, etc.);

In addition to these two core "chain" essential components, how to design a set of Agent asset circulation management standards similar to the ERC20 standard, incorporating a decentralized storage system, decentralized verification mechanism (memory system, behavior system), decentralized resource allocation and incentive mechanism, etc. are all issues that ELIZA needs to consider in its long-term "chain" reform.

Even though the ELIZA framework does not aim at chaining, it is worth exploring how to modularly integrate into the consensus layer of each chain, participate in collaboration in governance and verification, etc.

Perhaps only when the “chainable” roadmap is clear, EliZA can firmly take the top spot in the EVM level in the AI Agent era. But opportunities and variables are also in this process.

What will ai16z iterate step by step? Can new frameworks like Arc catch up? Which framework will first have a clear path for chain-based advanced development? Who can take the lead in developing a feasible commercial closed-loop path like Virtual? These are all directions to pay attention to. Friends who are concerned about the subsequent evolution and development of AI Agent framework standards can communicate more.