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Recently, I've been tinkering with on-chain AI Agent interactions and got a bit itchy to incorporate them into strategies, honestly driven by the hope that "let it monitor the market for me, so I don't have to stay up late"… But for real-world deployment, there are still a few safety nets: First is permissions—don't give too much authority, especially unlimited quotas. If the Agent gets led astray by prompt instructions, the loss can be instant. Second is routing/slippage—when dealing with small, illiquid pools, the apparent gains look good on paper, but in reality, a single trade can cause the price to skyrocket, and impermanent loss is hidden behind "earning fees." Third is exception handling—RPC hiccups, gas spikes, contract upgrades—these edge cases, the Agent doesn't care about money, it just executes strictly according to rules. I've seen a lot of the on-chain game inflation + studio + token price spiral, which is essentially "automation stacking automation," and in the end, no one wants to be the one hitting the pause button. Anyway, my current safety measures are: small amounts, whitelisted contracts, manual secondary confirmation—better to be slow and safe.