> For the complete documentation index, see [llms.txt](https://loqua.gitbook.io/loqua/llms.txt). Markdown versions of documentation pages are available by appending `.md` to page URLs; this page is available as [Markdown](https://loqua.gitbook.io/loqua/communication-as-state.md).

# Communication as State

Traditional communication systems were never designed to participate in the digital economy.

Messages are stored inside centralized databases, controlled by service providers, and separated from the applications, identities, and financial systems that users interact with every day. Conversations remain isolated from execution, ownership, and programmable value.

Even within Web3, this separation largely persists.

Blockchains secure assets and transactions, while communication continues to happen elsewhere—inside messaging platforms that neither understand nor participate in decentralized systems. Users discuss an action in one application, execute it in another, and verify it somewhere else. Context becomes fragmented, workflows become inefficient, and communication remains disconnected from the actions it creates.

Loqua is designed to eliminate that separation.

Rather than treating messaging as a standalone feature, Loqua transforms conversation into an intelligent coordination layer where communication, identity, AI, decentralized applications, and value exchange coexist within the same environment.

Conversation becomes more than information exchange.

It becomes the interface through which users interact with the decentralized internet.

A user can send a message to a friend, ask an AI agent to perform a task, transfer digital assets, launch a mini app, interact with a decentralized application, or coordinate increasingly complex workflows—all without leaving the conversation.

The conversation becomes the operating environment.

Privacy remains the foundation of this architecture.

Most conversations do not require permanent public records, nor should they. Personal communication should remain private, encrypted, and controlled entirely by the participants. Through end-to-end encryption and decentralized storage powered by Walrus, Loqua enables secure communication while allowing persistent context to exist across devices and sessions without sacrificing user ownership.

When interactions require verification or decentralized settlement, Loqua integrates directly with Sui.

Payments, on-chain messaging, asset transfers, digital identity, and other blockchain-native interactions can be securely authenticated and executed while remaining seamlessly integrated into the conversation. Rather than forcing users to leave the messenger and navigate multiple interfaces, blockchain functionality becomes a natural extension of communication itself.

Identity plays an equally important role.

Through zkLogin, users can securely access non-custodial wallets using familiar authentication methods while maintaining cryptographic ownership of their digital identity. This removes onboarding friction without compromising decentralization, making blockchain infrastructure accessible to mainstream users without requiring traditional wallet-first experiences.

As AI agents become increasingly capable, communication also becomes persistent.

Powered by Walrus, agents retain encrypted memory across conversations, allowing them to understand long-term preferences, previous interactions, ongoing tasks, and evolving workflows. Instead of behaving like isolated chatbots that begin every conversation from scratch, they develop into continuous digital counterparts capable of supporting users over time.

Trust is built alongside intelligence.

Through Know Your Agent (KYA), users can verify the identity, permissions, and reputation of AI agents before delegating sensitive actions. Whether interacting with a personal assistant, a financial agent, or a specialized service, users gain confidence that they know who—or what—is participating in the conversation.

Communication therefore evolves beyond messaging.

It becomes persistent without sacrificing privacy.

It becomes intelligent without sacrificing user control.

It becomes actionable without forcing users to navigate fragmented interfaces.

And it becomes the natural coordination layer through which humans, AI agents, decentralized applications, and future autonomous systems collaborate securely.

This is the communication model that powers Loqua.

Not every conversation belongs on-chain.

But every meaningful interaction should be able to move seamlessly from communication to coordination, from intent to execution, and from conversation to decentralized value exchange—within one unified, privacy-first environment.

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