Illustration of MetaMask's new AI agent wallet with security features for DeFi trades.
Illustration of MetaMask's new AI agent wallet with security features for DeFi trades.
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MetaMask launches self-custodial AI agent wallet

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MetaMask has introduced a new wallet designed for AI agents to conduct decentralized finance trades while maintaining user oversight. The launch was announced Monday by the Consensys-owned provider. It includes built-in security measures such as transaction simulations and spending controls.

The MetaMask Agent Wallet permits autonomous software to access swaps, perpetual futures, prediction markets and liquidity provisioning on Ethereum-compatible blockchains. Users retain control through default Guard Mode settings that enforce spending limits, protocol allowlists and two-factor authentication for risky actions. Every transaction undergoes simulation, threat scanning and MEV protection before execution. Transactions deemed safe receive coverage of up to $10,000 through the company's Transaction Protection program. The product is currently available via a limited early-access program, with wider distribution expected in the coming months. Consensys CEO Joe Lubin stated that agents will manage real capital and that supporting infrastructure must match those demands. An opt-in Beast Mode option reduces approval prompts while still requiring human input for potentially malicious activity.

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Initial X reactions highlight excitement for MetaMask's self-custodial AI agent wallet enabling autonomous DeFi trades with security features like simulations and limits, as noted by Consensys staff and crypto accounts. Skeptical voices question the necessity, point to prompt-injection risks, and criticize it as solving an unasked problem amid macro shifts. Neutral posts describe early access rollout and $10k coverage without strong opinions.

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A bustling crowd of developers at an AI and blockchain hackathon in Miami Beach, building innovative projects with AI agents and drones.
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AI agents spark startup frenzy at consensus miami hackathon

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Nearly 1,000 developers gathered in Miami Beach for the EasyA Hackathon at Consensus Miami 2026, building AI-native projects focused on autonomous payments, drones, and consumer apps. The event highlighted a shift toward practical AI and blockchain applications.

MoonPay has introduced a virtual debit Mastercard that enables AI agents to spend stablecoins directly from self-custodied wallets at any online merchant accepting Mastercard. The card uses real-time crypto-to-fiat conversion at checkout, without requiring users to preload funds or move assets offchain. It is available to users in the UK and Latin America through MoonPay’s CLI and agent workflows.

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Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced during the company's first-quarter earnings call that it is developing personal AI agents for its smart glasses and business use. The agents aim to help users achieve personal goals and assist entrepreneurs. This builds on the newly released Muse Spark model from Meta's AI lab.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange is designing derivative contracts on AI tokens, while CME Group and Intercontinental Exchange announce futures for GPU rentals.

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In the wake of Anthropic's unveiling of its powerful Claude Mythos AI—capable of detecting and exploiting software vulnerabilities—the US Treasury Secretary has convened top bank executives to highlight escalating AI-driven cyber threats. The move underscores growing concerns as the AI is restricted to a tech coalition via Project Glasswing.

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