Key Highlights
- Visa launched a beta CLI tool enabling AI agents to make crypto payments programmatically.
- The system supports autonomous transactions without API keys or manual approval.
- The initiative aims to power machine-to-machine commerce and AI-driven workflows.
Visa has unveiled an experimental command-line interface (CLI) designed to let software agents initiate payments directly from a terminal environment.
Developed by Visa Crypto Labs, the tool enables bots, scripts, and automated workflows to pay for online services programmatically, eliminating the need for manual authorization with each transaction. The product is currently in beta testing, with access granted through developer sign-ups.
Eliminating API key management
According to the company, the CLI enables “programmatic card payments” without requiring developers to store or manage API keys, a common security and operational burden in automated systems.
A command-line interface operates entirely through typed commands rather than graphical controls, making it suitable for server environments, developer pipelines, and machine-to-machine processes.
By embedding payment capability directly into scripts, the tool could allow software to purchase computing resources, data access, or other digital services on demand.
Designed for autonomous software workflows
Visa described the initiative as a step toward supporting increasingly capable AI agents capable of performing tasks independently.
Such agents already handle activities like coordinating services, executing business processes, and consuming application programming interfaces. Payment capability would extend that autonomy to financial transactions, including micropayments for cloud usage or API calls. The company framed this emerging model as “command-line commerce,” where machines transact without human intervention.
Part of broader push for AI-native payments
Other technology and financial firms are also developing systems to enable automated payments between machines. Coinbase and Cloudflare are collaborating on the x402 protocol, while Stripe has worked with Tempo on a Machine Payments Protocol intended to standardize agent-driven transactions.
Visa said it has integrated support for that protocol on its network, positioning the CLI as complementary to emerging standards rather than a standalone system.
Early access through developer channels
The tool is being distributed as an experimental release, with developers invited to enroll using accounts on GitHub. As a beta product, its capabilities and availability may evolve as testing continues and feedback is incorporated.
If automated agents gain the ability to spend money securely, they could reshape how digital services are bought and sold online.
Payments executed directly by software, whether for computing power, data, or machine-to-machine services, would move commerce toward a model where transactions occur continuously in the background, potentially at a scale and speed beyond human-driven systems.
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