{if first_name}
Hi {first_name},
{else if name}
Hi {first(name)},
{else}
Hi there,
{/if}
For as long as the internet has had commerce, we've operated under one assumption: bots are bad.
Now we're building systems that let AI agents shop, pay, and move money on behalf of customers.
That's why I wanted to have this conversation now.
The opportunity is obvious. So are the unanswered questions. Who decides which agents can be trusted? What happens when one authorizes a payment it shouldn't? And who's liable when something goes wrong?
On July 29, I'm sitting down with Ross Freiman-Mendel (Persona), Yuliya Kazakevich (Lithic), and Drew Edmond (Glenbrook Partners). They're approaching this from three different perspectives—identity, risk, and payments—but they're all working through the same challenge: adapting financial systems for a world where software acts on behalf of people.
If your work touches fraud, identity, compliance, risk, payments, or product, I know you'll find this conversation worthwhile.
Save your seat
Talk soon,
Alex