There’s been a subtle change lately in payment authorization. Previously, every time a bot wanted to make a transfer for you, it would pop up a window asking “Is this okay? Is this okay?”—But now? We simply draw a line: within this range, it’s up to the bot, but every transaction must be recorded.
That’s exactly what KITE does. It’s not some radical experiment; it’s more like installing a “plumbing system” for on-chain transactions—making automated payments an everyday thing. The bot spends money where it needs to, and every transaction is transparently recorded on-chain. No more hovering over authorization pop-ups every day, and no more worrying that you’ll wake up one day to an empty wallet.
In short, it changes “you have to approve every time” to “agree on the rules in advance.” Sounds simple? But this might just be the straw that makes Web3 payments truly usable.
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RugPullSurvivor
· 17h ago
Finally, someone has clarified this issue. It was really annoying to nod every time before. I give full marks to KITE's logic.
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ChainDetective
· 12-09 20:10
Finally, someone has explained this thoroughly. Those pop-ups before were really annoying. Now, with this new set of rules, things are much more comfortable.
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degenwhisperer
· 12-09 20:05
This approach is truly brilliant; finally, someone has figured out the authorization issue.
There’s been a subtle change lately in payment authorization. Previously, every time a bot wanted to make a transfer for you, it would pop up a window asking “Is this okay? Is this okay?”—But now? We simply draw a line: within this range, it’s up to the bot, but every transaction must be recorded.
That’s exactly what KITE does. It’s not some radical experiment; it’s more like installing a “plumbing system” for on-chain transactions—making automated payments an everyday thing. The bot spends money where it needs to, and every transaction is transparently recorded on-chain. No more hovering over authorization pop-ups every day, and no more worrying that you’ll wake up one day to an empty wallet.
In short, it changes “you have to approve every time” to “agree on the rules in advance.” Sounds simple? But this might just be the straw that makes Web3 payments truly usable.