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We are witnessing a dangerous but almost unacknowledged fact:
Alibaba Qianwen has integrated over 400 products, transforming into an AI superapp, where people's daily lives are all within this AI chatbox.
A single chat window connects search, office work, coding, content, customer service, enterprise systems, plugins, APIs, and third-party services.
Users no longer click links, fill out forms, or confirm terms one by one; instead, they hand over their intentions to the model—"Help me find a supplier," "Help me negotiate prices," "Help me handle this collaboration," "Help me decide which one to use."
This means AI is no longer just an information intermediary but is becoming an executor of economic actions, yet the world is not prepared with the most basic trust structure for AI.
No one knows "who" it is, nor is there a system that can prove "who it represents."
Today's AI ecosystem appears lively, but at its core, it is extremely fragile:
1) First layer of fracture: Identity
An AI says, "I represent a certain person / company / team,"
How do you confirm it really has authorization?
Is it accountable?
What are its boundaries of authority?
In today's systems, an agent created just 5 minutes ago is almost indistinguishable from an agent representing a large enterprise at the interaction level.
This is not a security issue but a structural blindness.
2) Second layer of fracture: Declarations
AI is facilitating services, transactions, and collaborations, but "who can provide what" remains just text on web pages, PPTs, PDFs, and chat records.
These declarations cannot be verified by machines and cannot be reused across platforms....
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