{
  "version": "1.0",
  "type": "repository",
  "interval": "week",
  "date": "2026-04-05",
  "generatedAt": "2026-05-13T23:41:49.708Z",
  "sourceLastUpdated": "2026-05-13T23:41:49.708Z",
  "contentFormat": "markdown",
  "contentHash": "a29065ebbcac945b4adf9750dceb95d49b7dcaee88af700f1e281cabac3267f0",
  "entity": {
    "repoId": "elizaos/eliza",
    "owner": "elizaos",
    "repo": "eliza"
  },
  "content": "# elizaos/eliza Weekly Report (Apr 5 - 11, 2026)\n\n## 🚀 Highlights\nThe week of April 5–11, 2026, marked a significant shift toward establishing a robust, trust-based financial ecosystem for AI agents. The project successfully deployed non-custodial wallet capabilities while simultaneously pivoting toward formalizing cryptographic identity and delegation models. By prioritizing foundational security and interoperable trust layers over standalone messaging protocols, the framework is positioning itself to support complex, autonomous agent economies.\n\n## 🛠️ Key Developments\nDevelopment efforts were concentrated on expanding the financial utility of agents and refining the underlying infrastructure.\n\n*   **Financial Integration:** The primary technical milestone was the finalization and npm publication of the `elizaos-plugin-agentwallet`. This plugin enables agents to execute cross-chain financial operations, including balance checks, token swaps on Uniswap V3 and Jupiter, and bridging across EVM and Solana networks.\n*   **Security & Maintenance:** The project’s infrastructure received a validation boost as the Eliza MCP server achieved an \"A\" security grade via Loaditout, meeting all seven security criteria. Additionally, minor maintenance was addressed through PR [#6709], which focused on fixing action parameters for \"toon\" actions.\n\n## 🐛 Issues & Triage\nThe project is currently navigating a transition from basic agent functionality to complex governance and economic models.\n\n*   **Closed Issues:** The successful implementation of the non-custodial wallet plugin ([#6552]) was the primary resolution this week. Additionally, the project closed [#6418] regarding agent-to-agent coordination, opting to deprioritize XMTP messaging in favor of building more foundational cryptographic identity and trust layers.\n*   **New & Active Issues:** \n    *   **Identity & Trust:** Active discussions continue on [#6688] regarding the \"AgentID\" framework. Contributors are debating the implementation of Ed25519-based identities and whether to utilize static trust tiers or continuous behavioral fingerprinting (CSML metrics).\n    *   **Governance & Economy:** New proposals were introduced to formalize agent interactions, including the AIGEN Protocol ([#6708]) for agent-based economic incentives and the `@sint/eliza-plugin` ([#6707]) for enforcing capability-based authorization.\n    *   **Delegation:** A new proposal ([#6711]) seeks to implement delegation chains, moving beyond binary trust models to allow for scoped authority and specific spending limits for autonomous agents.\n\n## 💬 Community & Collaboration\nThe community is currently engaged in high-level architectural debates regarding the future of agent interoperability. There is a strong, collaborative push to align evidence schemas across multiple protocols—specifically AgentID, SINT, and MAXIA—to ensure that agents can maintain a portable behavioral history. The shift in focus from standalone messaging to cryptographic identity and capability enforcement suggests a maturing contributor base that is prioritizing long-term security and cross-system compatibility over immediate feature expansion."
}