This question of intent…
…becomes far more serious in the age of AI. It acts, decides, and interacts on its own.
Buterin recently mentioned that the real issue is not how powerful AI becomes, but who controls it and how its behavior is verified. The goal is to shape its direction.
Warning against systems that concentrate power or operate beyond human oversight, he wrote,
“I want an AI future where we foster human freedom and empowerment…”
This is where Ethereum fits in, as infrastructure around it. A neutral layer where AI systems can make payments, prove actions, and build reputation transparently.
Think of this. AI agents could pay for services, interact with other agents, or post security deposits on-chain. These actions create accountability, the behavior of which, becomes traceable. Trust, in turn, becomes verifiable.
As Buterin explained, the goal is to make “trustless and/or private interaction with AIs possible.”
AMBCrypto previously reported that Buterin has proposed personal AI agents to address DAO voting fatigue.
Instead of users manually voting on every proposal, private AI models trained on their preferences could vote on their behalf.
He noted that “the usual solution, delegation, is disempowering,” especially when participation drops and power concentrates with large holders.
As AI expands what machines can do, who ensures they act the way users actually would?
When systems optimize the wrong things
Here’s a different example of the same vein.

