Not a checkout page. Not a screen-scraped form. A Solana-native commerce protocol built for autonomous software — the rail the agentic economy will settle on.
The web's payment stack — checkout pages, card networks, fraud heuristics, OAuth sessions — was built for human eyeballs and human clicks. Autonomous agents need a settlement layer that was designed for software the first time, not a wrapper bolted on top.
Plugging agents into existing checkout flows is hostile integration — fragile browser automation, screen scraping, and checkout-page hacks. It works the way powering an EV with a gas generator works. Technically possible. Catastrophically wrong long-term.
Agent transactions are high-frequency, low-value, sub-second, and machine-to-machine. That's not a card-network workload. That's not an Ethereum workload either. It's a Solana workload.
Every dollar moved by an autonomous agent — from B2B procurement to consumer concierge to A2A microservices — needs a rail. We're building the default one.
Wrapping legacy checkout pages preserves incumbent friction. BlkBxPay treats agents as first-class economic actors — and that's a structural design choice incumbents can't retrofit.
Every "AI shopping agent" today is a wrapper around the sloppy human GUI that is the web. It's a transitory hack, not infrastructure. Investors mistaking the hack for the platform are about to back the wrong layer.
We're talking to a small number of ecosystem-aligned investors who understand that the agent commerce layer is a once-per-decade rail bet. If that's you, we want to talk.