
A new research paper from IC3 claims that crypto and blockchain have limited utility in solving major AI challenges. These include autonomous AI agents, detecting AI-generated content, and removing algorithmic bias.
Researchers from top universities argue many claims about crypto’s role in AI are overstated.
The study clarifies that giving AI agents crypto wallets does not make them truly autonomous or intelligent.
Wallets only enable automation for trading, transacting, and accessing on-chain services without human approval. AI systems still depend on humans and underlying infrastructure. Traditional payment systems can also support such automation.
Companies like MetaMask and Robinhood are developing AI agent features, but IC3 says the hype exceeds the actual benefits.
IC3 researchers found that blockchains are good for timestamping and registering content, but they cannot reliably distinguish between human-generated and AI-generated material.
A blockchain records claims but cannot verify how content was originally created. An external classifier is still needed, and any errors would be permanently stored onchain. Most digital content today lacks cryptographic anchoring, limiting blockchain’s effectiveness.
The paper also challenges the idea that decentralization can fix algorithmic bias in AI models. Bias stems from the training process and is better addressed through improved training techniques, not decentralization.
