World has launched AgentKit beta, a new developer toolkit designed to help AI agents prove that a real, unique human stands behind their actions online.
World has rolled out AgentKit beta, a developer tool that connects World ID with x402 to verify that an AI agent is backed by a real person. The product is aimed at websites, APIs, and online services that increasingly need a way to distinguish legitimate automated activity from abuse. The launch also signals World’s bigger push to become an identity layer for the internet as AI agents take on more tasks for users.
The release comes as AI agents are starting to handle more online activity that once required direct human action. These tasks include booking reservations, comparing prices, shopping online, and accessing digital services automatically.
That shift is creating new trust problems for platforms. Many websites still treat automated traffic as suspicious by default. Those restrictions were originally built to stop malicious bots, but they can also block productive AI agents acting on behalf of real users.
According to World, some industry estimates suggest agentic commerce could grow into a $3 trillion to $5 trillion market by 2030. The company also said agents could account for as much as 25% of U.S. e commerce in that period.
At the center of the new tool is World ID, the company’s system for proving that someone is a unique human without publicly revealing their identity. With AgentKit, a verified user can delegate that identity signal to an AI agent.
The toolkit is built to work with x402, an open standard launched with backing from Coinbase and Cloudflare. x402 is designed to let software and AI agents make small online payments directly, giving websites a way to charge for access to APIs, services, and digital resources.
By combining identity and payments, websites can ask an agent for a micropayment, proof that it is backed by a real human, or both before granting access.
As Erik Reppel, Head of Engineering at Coinbase Developer Platform and Founder of x402, put it:
World argues that micropayments by themselves do not solve the issue of identity. One person could still operate many agents, each capable of paying small fees. That makes it hard for websites to tell whether activity comes from many real users or from one coordinated actor.
A related concern is privacy. Payment systems can leave public transaction records that reveal detailed patterns of an agent’s behavior over time.
That is where proof of human comes in. As DC Builder, Research Engineer at World Foundation, said:
The model gives platforms more control over how they manage automated activity. A single person can delegate World ID to multiple agents, but websites can still recognize that those agents trace back to the same person.
That opens the door to more practical limits tied to the number of unique humans, not the number of bots or wallets. Reservation platforms could reduce hoarding. Ticketing sites could better block bulk buying. Free trial offers could be limited per person rather than per account.
A World spokesperson said:
The current beta is based on World’s existing architecture, which relies on Orb-based verification for the strongest proof of personhood. The company also said future versions may expand to credentials such as NFC enabled passports and IDs through World ID Credentials. World reports that its network includes nearly 18 million verified humans across more than 160 countries.
I think World is making a smart move by focusing on the trust gap that sits right in the middle of AI commerce. In my experience, payments alone never solve abuse problems online. I found the stronger part of this launch is the attempt to prove that an agent is acting for a real person without forcing platforms to collect more personal data. That balance between privacy, identity, and usability is what could make tools like this matter as AI agents become more common.
The post World Debuts AgentKit Beta for Human Backed AI Agents appeared first on CoinLaw.


