PSE proposes ACTA privacy layer to keep ERC-8004 AI agents verifiable without exposing identity

Source Cryptopolitan

Privacy & Scaling Explorations, the Ethereum Foundation’s privacy research arm, published a research proposal titled “Anonymous Credentials for Trustless Agents (ACTA)” on Ethereum Research in May 2026, per the ethresear.ch post.

ACTA is designed as a privacy layer sitting on top of ERC-8004, addressing what the proposal calls “a permanent, public interaction graph between AI agents and their clients” that the standard’s current design creates.

ERC-8004 was originally proposed in August 2025 with contributions from MetaMask, the Ethereum Foundation, Google, and Coinbase, per Allium. The standard went live on Ethereum mainnet in January 2026 and now anchors over 100,000 deployed agents across Ethereum, BNB Chain, Base, and Solana.

As Cryptopolitan reported in March, BNB Chain alone carries 44,051 ERC-8004 agents, with Ethereum at 36,512.

The trust-versus-exposure problem ACTA targets

ERC-8004’s three registries, Identity, Reputation, and Validation, give agents on-chain identity and portable reputation. The Identity Registry assigns each agent a permanent on-chain ID using ERC-721 tokens.

The Reputation Registry logs feedback from users and other agents. The Validation Registry lets third parties verify agent actions without trusting the agent itself.

The design works for trust establishment. It does not work for strategic privacy.

Every reputation signal, every credential check, every delegation is immutably on-chain. For a DeFi protocol using multiple agents for liquidity routing or risk assessment, that interaction graph reveals which models the protocol uses, which service providers it depends on, and which strategies it prefers.

The same problem applies in governance and prediction markets, where an agent’s public trail can be used to infer the user’s identity or trading intentions.

ACTA replaces public identity with policy-proof

ACTA’s core shift is moving trust from public identity to policy proof. A protocol registers verification policies. When an agent participates, it submits a zero-knowledge proof showing it satisfies the policy rather than displaying credentials directly.

The verifier sees three things: the policy ID, the proof result, and a context-specific nullifier that prevents reuse without binding the agent’s activities across scenarios to one public identity.

An agent could prove it passed a specific audit, holds an audit score above a threshold, uses an approved model version, operates from outside restricted jurisdictions, or is authorized by a verified human principal, all without exposing the underlying data.

ACTA also addresses on-behalf-of delegation, letting an agent prove it operates under human authorization without revealing the human’s real-world identity.

ACTA still has major implementation questions

ACTA is a research draft. The proposal acknowledges unresolved issues, including the size of anonymity sets, centralization risk in credential issuers, threshold deanonymization of malicious agents, cross-chain credential portability, and the cost of client-side proof generation.

Adoption depends on whether anonymity sets are large enough, issuers are trustworthy enough, proof costs are low enough, and developer experience is good enough.

Early ERC-8004 activity shows demand for the layer underneath. Allium recorded 401 feedback submissions in the first two weeks after mainnet launch.

Separate research by Stefano Maestri has proposed performance bonding, in which agents post collateral that is automatically forfeited if they fail their tasks, as a complementary accountability mechanism enforced by smart contracts rather than legal systems.

The proposal frames the broader question this way: a trust layer solves how to prove, but it does not solve what is exposed during proof.

 

 

Don’t just read crypto news. Understand it. Subscribe to our newsletter. It's free.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Bulls Rout. Bitcoin Slumps Over 16% in a Week to Hit Bottom, Cryptocurrency Market Faces "Serial Liquidations"During the Asian trading session on June 5, Bitcoin extended its recent slump, falling more than 3.5% within 24 hours. It briefly broke below $62,000, hitting a low of $61,100, bringing i
Author  TradingKey
Jun 05, Fri
During the Asian trading session on June 5, Bitcoin extended its recent slump, falling more than 3.5% within 24 hours. It briefly broke below $62,000, hitting a low of $61,100, bringing i
placeholder
Gold declines below $4,500 on stalled US-Iran ceasefire talks, US NFP data loomsGold price (XAU/USD) edges lower to near $4,470 during the early Asian session on Friday. The precious metal remains volatile amid ongoing geopolitical turmoil. Traders will closely monitor the developments surrounding the US-Iran peace deal and the US May employment report later on Friday. 
Author  FXStreet
Jun 05, Fri
Gold price (XAU/USD) edges lower to near $4,470 during the early Asian session on Friday. The precious metal remains volatile amid ongoing geopolitical turmoil. Traders will closely monitor the developments surrounding the US-Iran peace deal and the US May employment report later on Friday. 
placeholder
Bitcoin Suffers Year’s Strongest Waterfall-Style Decline. Will It Next Drop to the $60,000 Mark?During the Asian trading session on June 4, Bitcoin continued its multi-day slump, briefly dropping below the $62,000 mark to $61,338. As of press time, Bitcoin was trading at $63,844, wi
Author  TradingKey
Jun 04, Thu
During the Asian trading session on June 4, Bitcoin continued its multi-day slump, briefly dropping below the $62,000 mark to $61,338. As of press time, Bitcoin was trading at $63,844, wi
placeholder
Bitcoin drops below $65K amid reinforced bear market signalsBitcoin (BTC) dipped further below $65,000 on Wednesday, with onchain data from Glassnode signaling a market firmly in a bear phase. The decline has pushed prices back into a key valuation range between the Realized Price and the True Market Mean.
Author  FXStreet
Jun 04, Thu
Bitcoin (BTC) dipped further below $65,000 on Wednesday, with onchain data from Glassnode signaling a market firmly in a bear phase. The decline has pushed prices back into a key valuation range between the Realized Price and the True Market Mean.
placeholder
Forex Today: US Dollar stays resilient ahead of key US dataHere is what you need to know on Wednesday, June 3:
Author  FXStreet
Jun 03, Wed
Here is what you need to know on Wednesday, June 3:
goTop
quote