Anthropic tested autonomous trading between AI agents

Anthropic, considered one of the world's leading organizations in the field of artificial intelligence technologies, recently conducted a unique scientific experiment. This was reported by Zamin.uz.
The company's specialists have developed a special closed marketplace on which artificial intelligence agents could independently conduct trading relations with each other. Within this project, neural networks acted both as seller and as buyer and entered into economic relationships.
This was reported in detail by reputable technology publications. During the experiment, intelligent systems concluded mutual deals for specific goods and services, using real monetary funds.
It is noteworthy that this process was carried out from start to finish in a fully automated manner, without human involvement. In the opinion of industry experts, the successful testing of such a system may begin a completely new and modern stage of economic relations in the future.
Representatives of Anthropic aimed, through this test, to deeply study the ability of artificial intelligence to make analytical decisions in complex economic situations. As a result of the consistent development of this technology, in the near future an opportunity will arise to fully entrust to robots daily purchases, the conclusion of inter-enterprise contracts and even complex business negotiations.
This, in turn, will serve to save time for humanity and reduce errors in economic processes. It is also particularly worth noting that such technological achievements are expected to fundamentally transform the financial system.
Artificial intelligence agents may surpass human capabilities in rapidly analysing market conditions, in offering the most optimal prices and in rationally distributing resources. This experiment indicates that a new era is beginning not only in the technological sphere but also in economic theory and practice.
It is by no means impossible that in the future such autonomous systems will become the main participants in global trade turnover.





