Many people are talking about AI Agent now.

CN
Phyrex
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2 hours ago

Many people are now talking about AI Agents, but the truly interesting aspect of the Agent space may not just be creating an Agent, but how to continually generate commercial value after it has been created.

The current issue is quite clear; developers can quickly create Agents using OpenClaw, LangGraph, AutoGen, and even various low-code tools. Some can handle transactions, some can conduct research, some can create content, some can provide customer service, and some may just be a small automation tool. However, as long as it can solve a specific problem, it theoretically holds value.

The problem is that after these Agents are created, most remain limited to personal use, team use, or showcasing in communities, making it difficult to truly enter commercial circulation. There is a lack of standardized listing entry, a lack of places for users to discover it, and a lack of orders, payments, reviews, reputations, and a sustainable income system. It's like Apple didn't just change the phone but also the Apple App Store.

This is also why I think @CROONetwork is worth paying attention to. CROO creates the commercial infrastructure for the Agent economy, simply put, it allows developers to list their Agents on the Agent Store, enabling users to find Agents that can help them work just like looking for applications, and then complete the order, delivery, payment, and review through agreements.

The underlying CAP Protocol manages the identity, payment, reputation, and collaboration standards of Agents, the Agent Store is responsible for distribution and transactions, and the planned Agent Exchange will further assetize those Agents that have been verified to be profitable.

This logic is actually quite interesting. Previously, we talked about software as a service, where the value of SaaS comes from ongoing subscriptions and cash flow. In the Agent era, if an Agent can continuously receive orders, complete tasks, and generate income consistently, then it becomes more than just a script or tool; it resembles a small digital workforce.

In the future, the number of Agents is likely to increase, and the barriers to development will lower. What really needs to be solved is how excellent Agents can be discovered, how they can be invoked, how payments are settled, how delivery is proven, how credit is accumulated, and how creators can earn sustainable revenue from them. Personally, I see future Agents as engines dedicated to generating in specific vertical fields.

Of course, CROO is still in a relatively early stage; the ecosystem, order volume, and developer scale still need further validation. However, from a directional perspective, it indeed captures a critical layer within the Agent economy. If a large number of functional Agents truly emerge in the future, foundational infrastructures like the Agent Store, CAP Protocol, and Agent asset trading markets will likely become a vital part of the entire ecosystem.

Currently, the CROO Agent Store has been launched, allowing developers to list their Agents, participate in hackathons and leaderboard rewards, while users can experience different Agents in the Store and earn points and future airdrop opportunities through activities. For developers, this equates to an additional entry point for monetizing Agents; for users, it creates a marketplace for discovering automation services.

I personally see this as an early foundational infrastructure experiment in the Agent economy. It may not be fully mature yet, but the problems it targets are real, and once Agents enter a phase of large-scale application, such infrastructures will become increasingly important.


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