When identity, execution, discovery, and settlement operate as one connected system, agents can complete multi-party workflows end to end — verifying counterparties, executing tasks, and settling value across chains — without requiring a person to authorize each handoff.
LONDON, UK — July 3, 2026 — Lithosphere today described how its integrated Web4 infrastructure stack supports autonomous agent-to-agent workflows — interactions in which one agent locates another, agrees on a task or exchange, executes the work, and settles the result across chains, all without requiring human authorization at each step of the process. The company stated that this capability is a direct consequence of how Lithic, PPAL, DNNS, and MultX were built to function as a single connected system rather than as separately managed components.
Most blockchain infrastructure is designed around a model where a human initiates each significant step: signing transactions, approving movements of value, confirming counterparties. That model is a reasonable fit for applications where human decision-making at each step is the intended design. It becomes a constraint the moment the application requires agents to operate across multiple steps, with multiple counterparties, on timelines too short or at volumes too high for human sign-off at each point to be practical.
Lithosphere’s architecture is built for the second model. PPAL establishes a persistent, privacy-aware identity for each agent operating on the network, built on the LEP100 standard. That identity does not need to be re-verified each time the agent interacts with a new counterparty or crosses into a different part of the stack; it carries forward natively. DNNS allows agents to locate services and counterparties within the same architecture that manages their identity, without routing discovery requests through an external lookup system. Lithic provides the execution environment where agent tasks run under verifiable, deterministic conditions — conditions that can be confirmed after the fact and that produce a reliable record of what occurred. MultX handles the cross-chain settlement that closes the loop when a workflow’s outcome needs to move value across networks.
Together, these four components describe a complete path for an autonomous agent workflow: an agent with verified identity locates a counterparty through the network’s native naming layer, executes an agreed task under deterministic conditions, and settles the result across chains — all within the same system, without stepping outside the stack’s trust model at any point in the process.
The relevance of this architecture increases as agent-to-agent commerce begins to resemble the kind of activity that currently requires human intermediation to be trustworthy. The reason intermediaries exist in most multi-party transactions is that the parties involved need some mechanism for verifying who they are dealing with, confirming what was agreed, and ensuring that the settlement reflects what actually happened. Lithosphere’s stack provides those mechanisms at the infrastructure level, which is what makes it possible to remove the human intermediary from individual steps without removing the trust guarantees those steps depend on.
“The interesting question in agent infrastructure is not whether agents can execute tasks autonomously — most execution environments can support that in isolation,” said J. King Kasr, Chief Scientist at KaJ Labs. “The question is whether the full workflow, identity verification, task execution, counterparty discovery, and cross-chain settlement, can happen within a single trust context without a human re-establishing that context at each step. That is what Lithosphere’s integrated stack is built to provide.”
As autonomous agent activity across the Lithosphere ecosystem continues to grow, the company has indicated that its development focus will remain on ensuring the integrated nature of the stack scales with that activity — keeping identity, execution, discovery, and settlement functioning as one coherent system rather than allowing them to diverge into separately managed concerns as the network expands.
About Lithosphere
Lithosphere develops Web4 blockchain infrastructure for programmable digital assets, cross-chain interoperability, and AI-native decentralized execution. Its integrated stack, comprising Lithic, PPAL, DNNS, and MultX, provides autonomous agents, developers, and applications with a single coordinated environment for identity, execution, discovery, and cross-chain settlement.
Media Contact
Dorothy Marley
KaJ Labs
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