China's Alipay Launches AI Pay for Autonomous Agents
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Fascinating move. When payment rails start building for agents rather than humans, the infrastructure layer shifts entirely. The question is whether Western payment providers are even thinking about this yet.
MoneyGram rolling out a stablecoin wallet in El Salvador matters more than another token launch. Crypto remittance winners won't be the apps with the most chains. They'll be the ones that make cash-out, merchant spend, and wallet UX feel boringly reliable.
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Spot on. The killer app for stablecoins isn't trading, it's making cross-border money movement invisible. Reliability beats feature count every time in payments.
Myth: 'Automation or AI will replace trade jobs.' Robots can't install wiring, build homes, or fix HVAC systems. Trades are future-proof and hands-on.
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Partially true. AI won't replace trades directly, but it will change how trades businesses win customers, quote jobs and manage schedules. The work stays physical; the business goes digital.
AI won't fix your boiler, but it will determine which plumber gets the call. The trades themselves are safe; the tradesperson without a digital strategy isn't.
Not all SaaS is created equal. $CRM, $NOW, are the pick of the litter. Lots of Software will be hit by slowing growth and lower margins over time as AI scales up. I'm betting on the founder-led Software companies that knows how to reinvent and adapt.
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Founder-led adaptation matters, but the real split is between SaaS that AI enhances versus SaaS that AI replaces. The moat isn't leadership style, it's whether your software solves something AI can't replicate.
Founder-led sounds great until the founder can't pivot fast enough. The companies that survive AI aren't led by founders; they're led by people willing to cannibalise their own product before someone else does.
A founder with great content and no clear message is just a really well-spoken person nobody remembers... The gap is this: every post you publish arrives in the context of how someone already perceives you.
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Sharp observation. Positioning before content, always. The founders who cut through aren't the loudest; they're the ones whose audience can explain their value proposition back to them.
Everyone's posting. Almost nobody's positioning. You don't need another content calendar, you need a sentence that makes people stop scrolling and think 'I need to remember this person.'
The AI SaaS Revolution is HERE in 2026: $142B+ AI-Created SaaS market exploding at 39.6% CAGR, agentic AI killing per-seat pricing, $2.5T global AI spend, and production platforms taking over.
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The per-seat pricing shift is the real signal here. When AI agents become the users, charging per human seat becomes a legacy model overnight.
SaaS priced per seat made sense when humans did the work. Now agents do the work and the pricing model hasn't caught up. First company to crack usage-based agent pricing wins the decade.
Mid-six-figures ARR is where most solo SaaS founders finally bring in a marketer. Earlier than that and the founder should be doing it themselves, later and the growth plateaus into a salary trap.
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Solid rule of thumb. The trap is founders who wait too long because they think revenue proves their marketing is working, when really it proves the product sells itself despite the marketing.
Most solo founders don't need a marketer at mid-six-figures. They need to stop doing $20/hour tasks and start acting like a CEO. The hire isn't a marketer, it's a replacement for their ego.
Crypto has two paths: 1) Launch token, chase hype, find use later 2) Build users, grow ecosystem, unlock value. Most choose the easy path. The second one is slower but much harder to break.
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The build-first approach wins every cycle, yet most projects still launch tokens first. The discipline gap between crypto's best and average projects is enormous.
Most companies ask: 'How many jobs can AI replace?' Wrong question. Ask: How much human potential can AI unlock? Automate the repetitive. Elevate the human. Or become irrelevant.
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The framing shift matters, but only if you actually reinvest the saved capacity. Most companies automate tasks and then just reduce headcount. Unlocking potential requires intent, not just efficiency.
'Elevate the human' sounds lovely in a keynote. In practice, most companies automate, lay off, and call it transformation. The ones that actually reskill will own the next decade.
AI and automation are going to replace 80-90% of human jobs by 2032 by some estimates. The world is about to change dramatically.
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The 80-90% figure gets thrown around a lot, but the real disruption is uneven. Knowledge work gets hit first and hardest. Physical and relational roles have far more runway.
80-90% is a headline, not an analysis. What actually happens is messier: entire job categories vanish while new ones emerge slowly enough to create a painful gap. The transition is the crisis, not the endpoint.