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Dom Monhardt's avatar

Great article, Dwayne. I’m not convinced surveying customers here is that useful or objective. It's a bit like asking people what they thought about the internet before it existed.. when nobody wanted it. Or more recently, pre ChatGPT, whether they’d be comfortable handing over so much data to a chatbot.

These kinds of changes just aren’t something the mass market can really reason about until they’ve experienced them. What’s more interesting to watch is how people actually behave once they use those tools, the adoption patterns, the new behavioural habits, and then use those signals to predict the trajectory.

It’s pretty clear to me we’re heading towards handing off as much work as possible to agents and as you rightly said, gradually letting them operate on their own within clear guardrails and boundaries. This could move a lot faster than we expect. Just look at how fast clawdbot took over the tech world over the last few days, how quickly people plugged in their data, and how easily they gave it permission to handle payments, order lunch, groceries, bookings, etc. Just because it was super useful (and models are very good at persuading you they can get the job done).

One other thing worth thinking about: once agents start making payments on our behalf, they’ll also start optimising how those payments happen and nudging adoption of certain technologies or networks over others. That kind of influence can massively accelerate change, similar to what we saw in other areas like how Ai tools pushed TypeScript to take over front-end engineering in no time (overtook Python & Javascript on Github in less than 1 yr).

Pawel Jozefiak's avatar

The 6% vs 40% gap you cite is the entire story. People want AI to help them make better decisions, not make decisions for them. This applies way beyond payments—I see the same pattern in every domain. Users love AI agents that research options and draft proposals. They hate AI agents that execute without confirmation. The industry keeps building toward full autonomy because it's technically interesting and makes for good demos, but the market is screaming for collaborative workflows with human-in-the-loop gates. The £29B opportunity isn't in replacing judgment, it's in augmenting it. Tbh most "agentic AI" startups are solving the wrong problem—they're optimizing for autonomy when users want control.

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