

Proof of Human Salon Series x The House
AI agents are expanding faster than the infrastructure built to verify them. Bots now account for half of all internet traffic, and as agentic commerce accelerates, the question of who is actually behind an autonomous transaction has never been more urgent.
This is the conversation the industry needs to have.
Join us on April 10 at The House by Edge & Node for an evening of speakers and networking at the intersection of AI, identity, and Web3 infrastructure. We're bringing together builders, fintech practitioners, and AI innovators to dig into what it actually takes to establish trust in an agent-driven world, from the protocols being built today to the compliance frameworks that will define tomorrow.
Conversation - Agentic Payments and x402
Conversation - Proof of Human
The humanness layer that the internet has yet to establish.
A focused conversation on why proof of human has gone from a crypto-native concept to a mainstream infrastructure requirement. How World ID and humanness verification are creating the trust layer for the next internet. What happens when every platform, payment rail, and dating app needs to answer one question: Is this a real person? Featuring perspectives from Tools for Humanity and founders operating at the agentic frontier.
Conversation- Proof of Human in an Agentic World
When machines must demonstrate they are acting on behalf of a human.
AI agents are initiating payments, negotiating deals, booking travel, and signing into platforms—autonomously. The four-party payment model wasn’t built for this. Neither was KYC. This panel explores what happens when the transacting party isn’t human: the emergence of “Know Your Agent,” the delegation of identity, the liability gaps, and why proof of human becomes the root of trust for every agentic workflow.
Demonstration - Proof of Human
Tools for Humanity, the team behind World and AgentKit, will be part of the conversation, alongside voices shaping how this technology gets built, deployed, and governed at scale.