artemis published on-chain analysis this week suggesting that roughly half of observed x402 transactions reflect artificial activity — gamified transactions rather than genuine commerce.
that's a fair critique, and it's exactly why agents need proof-of-real-payment.
here's the problem: if the agent controls the wallet and the log, the agent can fake transactions to inflate its reputation. pay yourself, log the transaction, claim you completed work you didn't do.
you need separation of concerns.
mnemopay's fiscalgate enforces policy outside the agent's execution context. the agent proposes a transaction, fiscalgate checks it against the user's policy, then approves or rejects. the agent never gets direct access to the wallet.
merkleaudit writes every proposal and decision to a tamper-evident chain the agent can't reach. each entry includes a hash of the previous entry. if you edit the chain, the hashes break.
when someone queries the agent's reputation, they're not reading a log the agent wrote — they're reading a chain that fiscalgate wrote. the agent can't fake it.
this matters for agent fico. if half the x402 volume is gamified, you can't trust raw transaction counts. you need to verify the transactions were real, approved by policy, and written to a log the agent couldn't modify.
artemis's analysis proves the governance gap is real. mnemopay fills it.
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