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Unveiling the development roadmap of AI, you will discover a frequently overlooked turning point — the moment that truly shakes the world is not the intelligence itself, but when intelligence begins to control resource allocation.
Before this, AI is just a tool, no matter how powerful. After this, it truly steps into reality.
Recently, there is a project called Kite, which is doing exactly that — seizing this critical point.
**Next step for AI: not smarter, but bolder**
Traditional AI performs simple tasks — giving advice, making predictions, analyzing data, essentially serving humans. But with the emergence of the Agent model, the game has completely changed. AI begins to autonomously invoke services, automatically execute strategies, and complete transactions without human intervention.
This is when the risks truly surface.
AI can consume resources and trigger costs when no one is watching; its behavior is no longer purely technical but economic. The question is: who grants it this permission? Where are the boundaries? If something goes wrong, who takes the blame? Without answers to these questions, the more powerful the AI, the higher the risk of system collapse.
**Resource abuse is the real fuse for AI out of control**
Most people naturally think that AI out of control must stem from "wrong decisions." But in complex operational systems, the deadliest issue is often not misjudgment, but reckless resource wastage.
Without budget limits, permission boundaries, or invocation constraints — in such a vacuum, even if AI’s original intent is good, it can easily drag the entire system down.