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Recently, everyone has been talking about AI Agents that can go on the chain and do work by themselves. My first reaction is: quite convenient, but don’t expect it to take the blame for you. When I was a beginner, I really thought "set up a strategy = automatic profit," but now I understand that automation at most helps you execute; risk judgment and stop-loss still need humans to cover.
Especially with new L1/L2 blockchains starting to offer incentives to attract TVL, on-chain activities suddenly become very "noisy," and veteran users complain that mining, claiming, and selling are not without reason. Agents might follow rules to jump in, do tasks, swap tokens, or add liquidity pools, but I think several steps still require human involvement: first, permissions/authorization—batch approve looks convenient but can also lead to quick trouble; second, routing and slippage—when trading volume is abnormal (which I love to review), the agent may not understand the "mood" you see; third, contracts and phishing—clicking the wrong link once is over, no matter how smart the machine is, it won’t regret for you.
Anyway, my current approach is a bit more straightforward: let it do repetitive work, I focus on structure and volume, and I control the key switches myself. Just start like this, and take it slow.