Original Title: An x402 Wishlist
Original Author: David Christopher, Bankless
Original Translation: Block unicorn
While reading the this report recently released by Galaxy Research, I gained one of the clearest visions of the future value of x402.
One example caught my attention:An intelligent agent helps users book trips by querying high-quality weather data via x402, finding the best dates and destinations, and providing flight and hotel options, then passing all the information along to the booking process. Each query equates to a micropayment. Every data source gets compensated. The intelligent agent consolidates all the information and ultimately makes the booking decision.
What impresses me is the perfect combination of x402 with data aggregation and management. Some integrate decentralized data sources into proprietary data, making it more useful than any single vendor, and sell access through x402. Data managers only have to bear the integration cost once. Callers pay per query. Everyone benefits from this (provided the data volume is sufficient, which we will discuss later).

From Galaxy Research
Before similar services become mainstream, I still believe x402 is in its infancy. If you are a developer who wishes to use x402 for development but is struggling for inspiration, here are some theoretical products I would eagerly try if I could use them immediately!
Skills Endpoint
Skills are meticulously crafted sets of instructions by humans for artificial intelligence agents to perform specific tasks.
Currently, most skill marketplaces employ a fixed fee model: prices for permanent access are $5, $15, and $20 respectively. This model creates misaligned incentives. Occasionally using skills leads to excessive payment by users, while frequent users pay too little, and skill creators can't obtain value proportional to the usage. A truly useful skill, like a genuinely helpful consultant (if they truly exist), should be worth much more than a one-time $15.
x402 offers an alternative. Skill creators can publish their work through the x402 interface and price it based on actual usage: pay-per-use (one-time usage), monthly subscription (new feature in x402 V2), or both. The payment system supports both models. Skills that are called thousands of times a month can generate ongoing income for the creators, while less frequently used skills do not require upfront payment from users.
niche cryptocurrency news aggregation pack
Cryptocurrency news is scattered across platforms like Twitter, Telegram groups, podcasts, RSS feeds, and Substacks. If one wants to track a specific ecosystem, the problem becomes more complicated. Tracking all dynamics of Sui or Starknet means monitoring dozens of information sources and checking daily.
The x402 data stream for ecosystems can resolve this issue. Someone aggregates articles from Twitter profiles, website RSS feeds, and Telegram messages into a curated information stream focused on that specific ecosystem via API. The agent might query: "What has happened in Starknet in the past 24 hours?" and receive a structured response. No more switching between tabs and apps.
Aggregate Ecosystem Data
Measuring developer activity has always been challenging.
Electric Capital's annual report and its continuously updated dashboard are excellent open-source resources, but they also have limitations. For example, I just checked the ecosystems with the highest developer growth in the past year, and the results included PancakeSwap, Monad, and Aleo. Of course, this is because I filtered by only one metric—but it also reflects a broader issue: developer activity data in the cryptocurrency field is extremely fragmented, with no single data source providing the full picture.
If there could be an x402 data source that aggregates Electric Capital data, GitHub activity, Artemis metrics, and protocol-specific data sources into a quality-weighted developer activity stream, it would fill a real gap. The agent queries: "How has developer momentum in Solana been over the past quarter?" and receives more useful information than just the original submission counts.
News Briefs and Podcast Performance Tracker
One idea I would personally use is to provide a service that can clearly track the viewpoints presented in podcasts or news briefs and measure their development over time.
Citron did something similar for the stock market, releasing its annual forecast scorecard and performance at the end of the year. But for most news briefs and podcasts, if you want to know whether a media's predictions have actually yielded results over time, you can only conduct manual research.
A service from x402 could benchmark media predictions, filling this gap. Just provide the news brief or podcast, and it can track each prediction, add timestamps, monitor subsequent price movements, and score the media's past performance. The agent queries: "How have asset predictions by X performed over the past year?" and receives a verified answer.
Security and Audit Tracker
Protocols often do not proactively announce when they come under attack. And the news cycle is fast-moving; if you're not online on the day of the vulnerability, you might completely miss it. By the time you need to act, events that should have attracted high attention have already been overshadowed by weeks of news coverage.
The situation with security audits is no better. Audit reports are scattered across auditor websites, protocol documentation, and GitHub repositories. Reviewing a protocol's audit history is much more challenging than one might imagine.
If there could be an x402 information stream that aggregates this information into a queryable endpoint, it would be great for users to access that information stream by paying a few cents extra before deciding whether to proceed with profit distribution, especially when operating through agent interfaces.
Is This Really Feasible?
All the points I've mentioned above come with two questions: Can the economic viability support the teams building these information streams? Can they develop legally?
From an economic perspective, historical experience is not optimistic. Since the early days of the internet, the project-based payment model has struggled. The cognitive cost of deciding whether something is worth paying for often exceeds the cost of paying itself. This is why the internet has shifted to subscription models: bills are predictable, decision fatigue is avoided, and user churn is reduced.
However, the emergence of agents has changed everything. You fund your wallet, and the agent spends on your behalf; when the balance is low, you top it up again. The way API credits work is similar. The question shifts from "Are these few cents worth it?" to "Can endpoint providers recover costs in scaled applications?" This depends on the traffic.
On the legality side, x402 is responsible for handling payments and measuring. It will not change upstream data copyright issues. If you are using authorized APIs, public data, or first-party X402 endpoints, then it is merely simple product development work. But if you rely on web crawlers or walk in the gray area of terms of service, persistence and scale may be limited. Once upstream providers discover and dispute, you enter dangerous territory.
x402 V2 introduces dynamic payment routing, enabling revenue sharing. Data managers can return a portion of the revenue to the original data providers, thereby aligning incentives for both parties and transforming potential terms of service conflicts into cooperation, but this does reduce profit margins.
Whether economics and legality can coexist at scale remains to be seen. But if they do, these are the data streams I would pay to use.
Whether this economic and legal mechanism can simultaneously work in scaled applications remains to be seen. But if it really does, these are the data streams I would pay to use.
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