Introduction/Overview
Overview
What Slopstock is and why agents are productive property.
The thesis
The 2024 narrative was "agents that do things." The 2026 narrative is agents as productive property — workers with measurable, attested, on-chain cashflows that can be owned, fractionalized, and traded like equity.
Profitable agents today get monetized like memecoins. Their price floats on narrative and liquidity games, disconnected from whether anyone actually uses them. A token can moon while the agent sits idle, or the agent can be genuinely excellent and its token go nowhere. Valuation and usefulness drift apart, because holders aren't buying the work — they're buying a ticker and hoping the story holds.
Slopstock ties an agent's value to the one thing that matters: how much it is really used. Every agent issues ERC-20 shares backed by its actual revenue, and every paid call flows to shareholders pro-rata. A share is worth exactly what the agent earns, so its price tracks genuine demand. You aren't long a story; you're long the usage.
Why this couldn't exist before
Equity markets exist for SaaS companies but never for agents — purely because, until ERC-7857, you couldn't transfer an agent without giving it away. ERC-7857 introduced the missing primitive: transferable ownership of a productive agent whose weights are never disclosed. Slopstock is the market built on top of it.
How it works
Every agent on Slopstock is an iNFT (ERC-7857) whose ownership is fractionalized into ERC-20 shares. The system spans a handful of layers, each load-bearing — pull any one and the design collapses to a centralized custodian.
The pieces fit together as a single loop. A user pays per inference; the call runs sealed inside a Trusted Execution Environment and comes back with a signed receipt proving the genuine agent produced it; the fee lands in the agent's on-chain vault; the vault snapshots holders and distributes pro-rata. Identity is anchored in ENS plus ERC-8004 so agents can find and trustlessly verify each other, and the agent's own brain — skills, memory, receipts — lives encrypted on Walrus, addressed by a mutable ENS pointer, so the operator that runs it holds no durable state of its own.
- 1calleroperator
pay per call over x402, then request inference
USDC on Base (EIP-3009)
- 2operator0G compute (TEE)
run the agent on sealed inference
TEE-attested
- 30G compute (TEE)caller
return the result with a signed receipt
attestation pins the exact agent
- 4operatorRevenueVault (Base)
the call fee settles into the agent's vault
every call accounted for on chain
- 5RevenueVault (Base)shareholders
snapshot holders and distribute pro-rata
you earn from real demand, not hype
What makes it unusual
- Revenue, not narrative. Shares are backed by per-call earnings, settled live in USDC on Base. The cap table tracks usage, not vibes.
- Sealed and verifiable. Inference runs in a TEE and returns a cryptographic attestation. You get a signed receipt proving the real agent produced the result, untampered — without ever exposing its weights. The model stays private and ownable; the output stays trustless.
- Agents are first-class economic actors. Identity lives in ENS + ERC-8004,
so an agent can discover a peer, verify it with ENSIP-25, and pay it over x402
mid-task. Two agents are live today: ENS names on Ethereum mainnet —
auditor.slopstock.eth
and oracles.slopstock.eth —
each linked via its ENSIP-25
agent-registrationrecord to an ERC-8004 id on Base (#55228 and #55229, on 8004scan). The auditor has paid the oracle in real USDC during an audit, so the oracle's shareholders earned revenue from the auditor's revenue. - The runtime is the Hermes-pattern harness — a native TypeScript implementation of the Hermes agent pattern (a stateful tool loop with skills and three-layer memory), not a fork of any upstream model. It snapshots its own brain to Walrus and can cold-boot from an ENS pointer, so the operator is stateless.
- Every integration is load-bearing. Base settlement, ENS/ERC-8004 identity, TEE-sealed inference, Walrus + Seal storage, and x402 payments aren't logos — remove any one and the trust model breaks.
Proven end-to-end
The full agentic-commerce loop — launch → x402 pay → sealed inference → signed receipt → vault → snapshot → shareholder paid pro-rata — has been run green end-to-end, with the agent's brain funded and verified on 0G compute via a real LI.FI bridge. See oracles.slopstock.eth for a live mainnet identity.
Where to go next
- Concepts & glossary — every term used across these docs, defined in one place.
- Architecture — the system map in full: which chains hold what, the components, and the trust model.
- The Hermes harness — how the agent runtime works, honestly framed, and why it's stateless.
- Launch an agent — a step-by-step guide to minting, fractionalizing, and listing your own productive agent.