EigenCloud Hosts Seoul Event, Explores AI-Crypto Synergy
EigenCloud hosted its Agentic event in Seoul, bringing together blockchain developers, AI researchers, and investors to probe the intersection of artificial intelligence and crypto. The discussion went beyond theoretical ideas, diving into real-world challenges like ownership for AI agents, identity frameworks, and payment execution.
EigenCloud, a decentralized cloud computing platform built on Ethereum's EigenLayer protocol, framed the event around the concept of "agentic companies"—autonomous software entities that are both intelligent (via AI) and investable (via crypto). The evening highlighted the infrastructural gaps that need filling for these systems to work safely and reliably.
Shifting from Ideas to Execution
The event opened with a presentation from EigenCloud's GM, Su Yang, who introduced the vision for agentic companies. Key questions emerged: What does it mean for an AI agent to own assets? How is identity defined for non-human entities? And where does accountability lie when actions are executed by software?
These weren’t just abstract debates. Participants, who ranged from deeply technical builders to investors, focused on implementation challenges. The discussion pivoted to blockchain-based solutions, including programmable payments, scoped permissions, and the use of wallets as identity mechanisms—all critical for safely deploying autonomous agents.
AI and Crypto: Convergence, Not Competition
Bulgami, a prominent speaker at the event, contextualized the conversation in current market realities. While AI is attracting substantial talent and capital, crypto is navigating a contraction phase following a volatile market cycle. But rather than being competitors, the two domains were framed as complementary—AI provides intelligence, while crypto ensures verifiability and economic alignment.
The synergy between these technologies is particularly relevant for EigenCloud, which has been developing infrastructure for verifiable AI agents. The EIGEN token, critical to the platform, supports slashing mechanisms for security breaches and powers Actively Validated Services (AVSs). This dual focus on blockchain-grade security and AI functionality positions EigenCloud to address the gaps discussed during the event.
Real-World Bottlenecks
The most practical part of the evening centered on tangible challenges, including how to safely enable agents to make payments and access systems without exposing sensitive credentials. These issues reflect where current AI and blockchain implementations often falter when applied at scale.
Participants explored solutions like scoped permissions and programmable blockchain workflows, bridging the gap between theoretical capabilities and practical deployment. A comparison emerged: just as YouTube turned media into software, agentic companies could turn companies into software—autonomous, verifiable, and programmable.
Market and Ecosystem Context
EigenCloud's focus on AI-crypto integration comes amidst a mixed market environment for its ecosystem. The EIGEN token recently faced challenges, including a $6.5M token unlock on April 2, 2026, and a $300M DeFi exploit at Kelp DAO, a related project, on April 19. Despite these hurdles, EIGEN showed resilience, rallying 15% on April 17 as network activity grew. As of April 28, the token traded at $0.176, down 1.92% over 24 hours, with a market cap of $121.9M.
While the broader crypto market struggles with liquidity and sentiment, EigenCloud’s focus on bridging AI and blockchain technologies could position it for long-term relevance, especially as demand for verifiable AI systems rises.
Building the Future
After the formal sessions, networking conversations underscored the community’s readiness to focus on execution. Builders shared their ongoing projects and hurdles, while investors probed how agentic companies might reshape industries.
The Seoul event wasn’t about delivering a finished vision. Instead, it signaled a shift in focus—from what’s possible to what’s practical. For EigenCloud and its ecosystem, the next steps involve tackling infrastructure bottlenecks and proving that AI-crypto convergence isn’t just a narrative but a deployable reality.