Lithosphere Outlines How Its Stack Handles Agent-to-Agent Coordination Without a Human in the Loop

Multi-step workflows between autonomous agents depend on identity, execution, discovery, and settlement resolving in sequence, without pausing for manual approval.
LONDON, UK – July 10, 2026 – Lithosphere today described how its stack is built to carry a task through multiple agents acting on each other’s behalf, without a person stepping in to approve each individual step. As more on-chain activity shifts from single human-initiated transactions to multi-step tasks handled between agents, the harder engineering problem is not getting one agent to act — it’s getting a chain of agents to hand a task to each other reliably.
A typical agent-to-agent workflow moves through several stages in sequence: one agent needs to confirm who it’s dealing with, locate the counterparty it needs, execute its part of the task, and settle the outcome, sometimes across more than one chain. Lithosphere’s stack maps directly onto that sequence — PPAL resolves identity, DNNS resolves discovery, Lithic resolves execution, and MultX resolves settlement, each handing off to the next without requiring the workflow to leave the architecture or wait on a manual approval in between.
“Agent-to-agent coordination breaks down at the handoffs, not in the middle of a single task,” said J. King Kasr, Chief Scientist at KaJ Labs. “The reason our stack is built as one connected system rather than four separate products is that a handoff between agents needs identity, discovery, execution, and settlement to already agree on what just happened — there’s no time for a person to check each step.”
This matters most as the number of agents involved in a single workflow grows. A two-agent handoff is manageable even with some friction between systems; a workflow spanning several agents, several services, and a cross-chain settlement step compounds that friction quickly if each layer doesn’t already trust the others. Users interacting with the ecosystem through Thanos Wallet, or participating in LITHO markets through Ignite, ultimately depend on that multi-agent coordination holding up without their direct involvement in each step.
As agent-to-agent commerce becomes a larger share of on-chain activity, Lithosphere positions its stack’s ability to move a task cleanly between agents — not just execute a task for one agent in isolation — as the more consequential test of Web4 infrastructure going forward.
About Lithosphere
Lithosphere develops Web4 blockchain infrastructure for programmable digital assets, cross-chain interoperability, and AI-native decentralized execution. Its integrated stack — Lithic, PPAL, DNNS, and MultX — gives autonomous agents, developers, and applications a single coordinated environment for identity, execution, discovery, and cross-chain settlement.
Media Contact
Dorothy Marley
KaJ Labs
+1 707-622-6168
[email protected]




