CoinFello has launched publicly at EthCC 2026, opening its AI-powered DeFi interface to users beyond its private alpha. The platform combines natural-language onchainCoinFello has launched publicly at EthCC 2026, opening its AI-powered DeFi interface to users beyond its private alpha. The platform combines natural-language onchain

CoinFello Debuts Publicly at EthCC 2026, Bringing AI-Powered DeFi to Retail Users

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com
  • CoinFello has launched publicly at EthCC 2026, opening its AI-powered DeFi interface to users beyond its private alpha.
  • The platform combines natural-language onchain execution with self-custody, delegated permissions and smart account automation.

CoinFello has officially gone public, using EthCC 2026 in Cannes as the stage for a launch that speaks to a familiar problem in crypto. Plenty of people hold digital assets. Far fewer actually use DeFi.

The company, based in Fort Worth, Texas, says its product is built for that gap. After a period in private alpha, CoinFello is now available through a web app and a newly released Android app, with iOS expected later. Its pitch is straightforward enough. Let users send tokens, swap, bridge, and automate on-chain actions through a chat interface, without giving up custody.

A conversational layer for wallets and DeFi

CoinFello describes itself as a self-sovereign AI agent for on-chain activity. In practice, that means users can type plain-language prompts instead of jumping between dApps, bridges and wallet pop-ups. The platform then translates those instructions into blockchain transactions and presents them in readable terms before anything is signed.

That is clearly aimed at the crowd sitting on idle tokens, not because they lack interest, but because onchain execution still feels like a minefield. One wrong click, one bad route, one approval too broad, and the cost can be real.

Delegated permissions, not blind wallet access

Security sits at the center of the launch message. CoinFello says it does not hand AI agents full wallet control. Instead, it uses delegated permissions with configurable limits on token amounts and timeframes. Private keys stay on the user’s device, with hardware-level protection on macOS through Secure Enclave.

The platform also plugs into the wider AI agent stack. Through integrations with tools such as OpenClaw, Claude Code, Kiro and Windsurf, CoinFello can function as an execution layer for personal agents that need to perform onchain actions within user-set boundaries.

]]>
Market Opportunity
DeFi Logo
DeFi Price(DEFI)
$0.000306
$0.000306$0.000306
-3.16%
USD
DeFi (DEFI) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

The Role of Reference Points in Achieving Equilibrium Efficiency in Fair and Socially Just Economies

The Role of Reference Points in Achieving Equilibrium Efficiency in Fair and Socially Just Economies

This article explores how a simple change in the reference point can achieve a Pareto-efficient equilibrium in both free and fair economies and those with social justice.
Share
Hackernoon2025/09/17 22:30
Metaplanet raises $1.4B to fuel BTC purchases and U.S. subsidiary launch

Metaplanet raises $1.4B to fuel BTC purchases and U.S. subsidiary launch

Metaplanet Inc. has formalized the subsidiary in Miami, Florida, naming it Metaplanet Income Corp.
Share
Cryptopolitan2025/09/17 23:34
Bitcoin devs cheer block reconstruction stats, ignore security budget concerns

Bitcoin devs cheer block reconstruction stats, ignore security budget concerns

The post Bitcoin devs cheer block reconstruction stats, ignore security budget concerns appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. This morning, Bitcoin Core developers celebrated improved block reconstruction statistics for node operators while conveniently ignoring the reason for these statistics — the downward trend in fees for Bitcoin’s security budget. Reacting with heart emojis and thumbs up to a green chart showing over 80% “successful compact block reconstructions without any requested transactions,” they conveniently omitted red trend lines of the fees that Bitcoin users pay for mining security which powered those green statistics. Block reconstructions occur when a node requests additional information about transactions within a compact block. Although compact blocks allow nodes to quickly relay valid bundles of transactions across the internet, the more frequently that nodes can reconstruct without extra, cumbersome transaction requests from their peers is a positive trend. Because so many nodes switched over in August to relay transactions bidding 0.1 sat/vB across their mempools, nodes now have to request less transaction data to reconstruct blocks containing sub-1 sat/vB transactions. After nodes switched over in August to accept and relay pending transactions bidding less than 1 sat/vB, disparate mempools became harmonized as most nodes had a better view of which transactions would likely join upcoming blocks. As a result, block reconstruction times improved, as nodes needed less information about these sub-1 sat/vB transactions. In July, several miners admitted that user demand for Bitcoin blockspace had persisted at such a low that they were willing to accept transaction fees of just 0.1 satoshi per virtual byte — 90% lower than their prior 1 sat/vB minimum. With so many blocks partially empty, they succumbed to the temptation to accept at least something — even 1 billionth of one bitcoin (BTC) — rather than $0 to fill up some of the excess blockspace. Read more: Bitcoin’s transaction fees have fallen to a multi-year low Green stats for block reconstruction after transaction fees crash After…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 04:07