Exploring the powerful synergy of account abstraction and intents

Authored by Kiwi Yao, researcher @OKX Ventures

When combined, smart accounts and intent create a powerful tool that allows you to manage your digital assets more efficiently. The ERC-4337 standard enables third parties to process order flows for you. This makes it simpler to carry out tasks while also improving scalability. The alliance between smart accounts and intent paves the way for more advanced interactions in the future.

What's the connection between AA and intents?

While intents and account abstraction (AA) are connected, they serve distinct roles in the ecosystem. There isn't a fixed binding relationship between the two, but a complementary synergy.

Intent is putting the user experience first, swiftly breaking down user needs and translating them into one or more user operations (user ops). It finds the best operational route to achieve a specific goal.

As history shows us, intents have addressed more straightforward needs. However, as technology advances, we're poised to tackle complex challenges with numerous conditions, multifaceted steps, and a range of execution environments. In such advanced scenarios, AI agents might even come into play.

To understand this further, here are some examples:

  • Consider Telegram bots as an intent innovation. Even though the backend still employs externally owned account (EOA) wallets, the user experience remains unaffected.

  • Imagine a scenario where a user wishes to purchase 1,000 USD worth of Ethereum. Here, the solver determines the parameters, such as the chain selection, the decentralized exchange (DEX), and slippage tolerance. The derived user op then interacts with an EOA, multi-party computation, or AA wallet at the backend.

  • Projects like 1inch's DEX aggregator are pioneering the intentional narrative. Here, users merely state their input and slippage tolerance, leaving it to the contract to find the optimal operation. Similarly, Flashbots auction search, with its transaction order preference, epitomizes the searcher intent. As the digital world evolves, we can anticipate myriad forms of intent emerging.

On the flip side, AA is all about backend operations. It streamlines the execution of user commands, providing a seamless and efficient experience.

Classifying intent

Understanding the different types of intent is crucial:

  • Conditional intent: Triggered by specific conditions, similar to an "if statement". An example from the financial realm would be the stop-loss feature.

  • Continuous intent: Denotes repetitive operations that occur based on recurring scenarios or time intervals, such as the principle behind monthly dollar-cost averaging.

  • Multi-step intent: This cascades from one intent to another, behaving much like a state machine. For instance, if someone intends to purchase Ethereum and has conditions about price thresholds, transfers, and arbitrage, this would fall under this category.

  • Intent graph: Multiple intentions come together to create a complicated system that's seen when users seek to purchase or sell tokens based on certain conditions, such as changes in governance, block mining, or market prices.

Account abstraction makes intents more efficient

The concept of intent results from technological advancements and user experience. By minimizing the need for operational signatures, intent streamlines user interactions across Web3. With the evolution of intent, we develop new infrastructures, languages, and approaches to problem solving, making it pivotal in shaping future applications.

Key opportunities include:

Intermediary intent pool or intent public chain

This involves innovative message formats to communicate with smart contracts, replacing traditional mempool systems for transaction propagation and discovery.

Diversified solver implementations

  • Short-term: Integration of mature super smart contracts.

  • Long-term: Usage of high-freedom AIs, albeit with implementation challenges. This will inaugurate an off-chain preprocessing followed by on-chain processing paradigm, beneficial for protocols like Uniswap X. The ZK coprocessor Axiom stands as a testament to the potential of privacy-solving.

Language evolution

Current players like Juvix and Essential are pioneers in this area. Their success hinges on building user trust and navigating the challenges ahead.

Elevating wallets

As the foundational element of the intent layer, wallets are primed to evolve into unified entry points. By integrating with diverse protocols, they can tap into significant user traffic.

Intent pools

Intent pools are like pipelines. They take user intentions and turn them into transactions. There are two main ways to do this: MEV boost auctions or on-chain transactions. A number of intent pools exist today:

  • Unlicensed intent pool: Enables propagation across system nodes, granting executors unrestricted access. This pool does pose some risks, such as DoS threats and MEV issues.

  • Licensed intent pool: Offers a resilient defense against DoS attacks. However, its inherent trust requirement can conflict with the blockchain's decentralized ethos.

  • Hybrid intent pool: Marries licensed propagation with permissionless execution. Order flow auctions exemplify this approach.

Further explorations:

  • Intent layer: Platforms like Anoma and Flashbots SUAVE are ushering in dedicated layers to address MEV risks.

  • Diversified solver implementations: Strategies include integrating contracts with smart contracts, off-chain preprocessing paradigms, and making sure of privacy in operations.

  • AI automation: The future sees two primary avenues: AI as an integrated wallet feature or AI directly linked with user op. Competitors in this area could range from Siri and Google Assist to ChatGPT clients.

  • Novel languages for intent expression: Efforts are underway to develop languages that enable private intent expression. Notable projects include Juvix, which offers a platform for crafting privacy-centric decentralized apps, and Essential, which is pioneering a domain-specific language (DSL) for intent expression.

Wallets and opportunities for entry

Intent's backend can seamlessly integrate with conventional EOA and MPC wallets. For instance, Telegram bots employ intent and still use EOA wallets without compromising on the user experience. With users' security concerns front of mind, future strategies might use AA to better manage risk.

Smart contract wallets and SDKs

While the market for components like bundler, paymaster, and providers like Wallet Factory is dense, intent introduces avenues for innovation.

Features and modularization

Most smart contract wallets already include features like social recovery. However, integrating intent can take this further. Examples of modularized features are found in wallets like Argent, Candide, and Gnosis Safe, which support additions beyond the EIP-4337 interface.

Social recovery options

  • Web2 service providers: Argent offers recovery based on trusted contacts.

  • User devices: Including browser and mobile storage.

  • Email: UniPass uses emails for recovery while protecting user data privacy with zero-knowledge proofs.

  • Multi-Sig: BLS Wallet and Argent allow recovery via multiple user-specified EOA addresses.

  • MPC: Web3Auth's service divides user keys for enhanced security, keeping the complete key hidden.

Transactional applications

Integrating with decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, supporting automated trading offers a spectrum of user benefits:

  • Uniswap X, for example, provides opportunities for order arbitrage.

  • Protocols can eliminate repetitive authorizations. A use case being dollar-cost averaging in DeFi protocols where investments occur automatically without manual intervention.

Cross-chain applications

These play a pivotal role in enhancing user experience across chains:

  • Cross-chain DeFi protocols: Orbiter, a decentralized bridge, offers low fees and swift multi-currency transfers.

  • Multi-chain DApp management protocols: Platforms like DAppOS function as cross-chain SDK protocols. By partnering with DEXs like Perpetual Protocol, they uplift the DeFi cross-chain experience.

ZK class application opportunities

The ECR-4337 standard offers strong encryption for user intents. This means zkProof can work better and potentially, a zkProof marketplace can emerge.

Encryption requirements

  • User ops can undergo threshold decryption or distributed key generation before transmission, providing decryption only after block confirmation by the bundler pool.

  • This interplay of zk, user ops, and gas verification propels the growth of zkproof and zkOracle, drawing parallels with platforms like the nil foundation.

Privacy payments process

The ECR-4337 mechanism allows users to execute privacy payments, safeguarding account confidentiality. Here's how it works:

  1. Users place funds into a privacy-protected rollup, targeting withdrawal to a new, unfunded CREATE2 address.

  2. They produce mixed withdrawal info, directing funds to a MixerPaymaster address, not their own.

  3. A user op with this info is created with UserOp.paymaster set as MixerPaymaster and sent to the ERC-4337 mempool.

  4. Bundlers pick this user op, verify its authenticity, and check MixerPaymaster's willingness to cover the gas fee.

  5. Once validated, bundlers integrate the user op into the chain, directing it to the entry point. This step results in deploying an account to the user's new address.

  6. The MixerPaymaster does the withdrawal, taking out the operation fee and sending the rest to the user's new address. The new address now has an account deployed. This procedure uses the ERC-4337 mempool without going through relayers.

Risks and thresholds

The architecture of intention mechanisms brings about critical trust, centralization, and transparency concerns. Remember, doing your own research is important to help keep your digital assets safe.

Centralization and trust

The cornerstone of intention mechanisms is trust. High trust expectations often lead to steep entry barriers for new entrants. Combined with unsupervised execution, it can result in block production being controlled by a few dominant entities, promoting centralization.

For instance, in the order flow auction space, established entities like Flashbots and CoWswap command significant market share, making it challenging for newcomers to gain traction without extensive resources.

Transparency issues

Intention mechanisms often allow users to relinquish some control over their on-chain assets. With many mempools being private, users might need clarification about how their intentions are executed. It's imperative for intention applications to make sure their systems are designed with caution, keeping potential threats at bay.

The final word

By seamlessly merging smart accounts and intent, we can usher in an era where digital asset management is efficient and sophisticated. The ERC-4337 standard entrusts third parties with order flows, streamlining operations and amplifying scalability. While intent and AA contribute uniquely, they exemplify how technology, with a user-centric approach, can simplify complex tasks and even integrate advanced tools like AI in future activities.

Ansvarsfraskrivelse
Dette innholdet er kun gitt for informasjonsformål og kan dekke produkter som ikke er tilgjengelige i din region. Det er ikke ment å gi (i) investeringsråd eller en investeringsanbefaling, (ii) et tilbud eller oppfordring til å kjøpe, selge, eller holde krypto / digitale aktiva, eller (iii) finansiell, regnskapsmessig, juridisk, eller skattemessig rådgivning. En beholdning av krypto / digitale aktiva, inkludert stablecoins og NFT-er, innebærer høy grad av risiko og kan svinge mye. Du bør vurdere nøye om trading eller holding av krypto / digitale aktiva egner seg for deg i lys av den økonomiske situasjonen din. Rådfør deg med en profesjonell med kompetanse på juss/skatt/investering for spørsmål om dine spesifikke omstendigheter. Informasjon (inkludert markedsdata og statistisk informasjon, hvis noen) som vises i dette innlegget, er kun for generelle informasjonsformål. Noe innhold kan være generert eller støttet av verktøy for kunstig intelligens (AI/KI). Selv om all rimelig forsiktighet er tatt i utarbeidelsen av disse dataene og grafene, aksepteres ingen ansvar eller forpliktelser for eventuelle faktafeil eller utelatelser uttrykt her. OKX Web3 Wallet og dets tilleggstjenester tilbys ikke av OKX Exchange og er underlagt Vilkår for bruk av OKX Web3-økosystemet.

Relaterte artikler

Se mer
hard wallet
Security
Wallets
Self-custody

A complete guide to 2024's best hardware wallets

Have you ever considered the most secure method to store your cryptocurrency? A hardware wallet provides an essential safeguard solution for your cryptocurrency assets by keeping them offline. Unlike hot wallets, which can be susceptible to cyber-attacks, hardware wallets securely contain the private keys you need to gain access to your digital assets.
29. juli 2025
Nybegynnere
30
NFTs generic
Blockchain
Ethereum
Protocols

All about Ethscriptions: the Ethereum protocol rivaling Bitcoin ordinals

Bitcoin ordinals took the Web3 world by storm following their introduction in January 2023. The adoption of ordinals has been massive, with millions of inscriptions being created in the few months since launch.
23. juli 2025
2
UPI and Web3 wallets India
Wallets

UPI and Web3 wallets: India's digital payment platform

Does India's adoption of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) signify the start of a new digital payment revolution? The potential is there. Web3 decentralized protocols and technologies offer individuals more control over their data, identities, and transactions, which could be the next step in the evolution of the internet. With India's evolving digital payment infrastructure, the country is well-positioned to take advantage of the possibilities of decentralization.
23. juli 2025
2
OKX Bot Trading
Trading guide
Blockchain
Trading basics

A beginner’s guide to IPOs: how cryptocurrency firms can go public

An initial public offering (IPO) is the process of a private company offering its shares to the public for the first time, allowing anyone to buy a stake in the company. This usually occurs when a company is looking to raise capital to fund its growth and expansion plans. IPOs have become increasingly popular among cryptocurrency firms in recent years, as they seek to gain mainstream recognition and credibility. This beginner’s guide will explore the IPO process and provide insights into how cryptocurrency firms can go public.
15. juli 2025
Nybegynnere
7
Friend.tech Learn banner
Ethereum

Decoding Friend.tech: a guide to the latest big thing in crypto SocialFi

In the 21st century, social media underwent a revolution. Platforms like Friendster, MySpace, and later Meta reshaped how we connected and shared online. As the years went by, the trend shifted towards mobile-centric platforms like Instagram, X, Snapchat, and TikTok, further expanding the boundaries of online interaction.
15. juli 2025
Nybegynnere
trade-academy-beginner-4
Mining
Bitcoin
Blockchain

The 9 best ASIC miners for mining cryptocurrency in 2024

Cryptocurrency mining is an essential process that secures and verifies transactions within a blockchain network. Miners use computational power to solve complex mathematical problems, validate transa
15. juli 2025
5
Se mer