> 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/vision.md).

# Vision

We believe that in the age of AI and Web3, communication can no longer remain a simple application-layer feature. It must evolve into the universal interface through which people, intelligent agents, applications, and decentralized networks coordinate, execute, and exchange value.

In the Web2 era, messaging served primarily as a communication utility. Conversations were confined within centralized platforms, user identities belonged to service providers, and the value generated through communication accumulated to corporate intermediaries.

Web3 decentralized ownership, programmable assets, and economic settlement, yet communication itself remained largely unchanged. Transactions moved on-chain, while conversations stayed fragmented across traditional messaging platforms. Users still navigate between chat applications, wallets, decentralized applications, and dashboards to accomplish what is fundamentally a single workflow.

This fragmentation creates a structural disconnect. Communication, execution, identity, and settlement operate as separate layers despite being parts of the same interaction.

Loqua is built to unify them.

Rather than treating messaging as a standalone product, Loqua transforms conversation into the primary interface for interacting with the decentralized internet. Through a single privacy-first messenger, users can communicate with friends, collaborate with AI agents, access decentralized applications, send digital assets, verify identities, and coordinate increasingly complex workflows without leaving the conversation.

Within Loqua, conversations are no longer passive exchanges of information. They become actionable interfaces where intent can securely transition into execution. Whether interacting with an AI agent, authorizing a payment, accessing a mini app, or coordinating on-chain activity, communication becomes the natural entry point for digital action.

Privacy remains fundamental to this vision. Personal conversations should remain private, while actions that require transparency, verification, or settlement can be cryptographically authenticated on-chain. This separation allows users to benefit from decentralized infrastructure without sacrificing confidentiality, creating a communication model that balances privacy with verifiability.

As AI agents become increasingly capable of acting on behalf of users, trust becomes as important as intelligence. Loqua introduces Know Your Agent (KYA), enabling users to verify who—or what—they are interacting with, understand an agent's permissions and reputation, and establish accountability across autonomous systems. Identity evolves beyond wallets and usernames into verifiable relationships between humans, AI agents, and decentralized services.

At the same time, persistent agent memory powered by Walrus enables AI agents to retain context across conversations and devices, allowing them to evolve from isolated assistants into long-term digital counterparts capable of supporting users over time.

Looking beyond today's products, we envision an Autonomous Web where humans, AI agents, decentralized applications, and eventually autonomous robotic systems participate within the same economic network. Communication, identity, execution, and settlement become parts of a unified infrastructure rather than disconnected experiences.

In that future, conversation is more than messaging—it becomes the universal interface for coordination. Users express intent naturally, AI agents orchestrate execution, decentralized infrastructure provides trust and settlement, and every participant can collaborate securely within an open, programmable ecosystem.

Loqua begins as a privacy-first agentic messenger on Sui.

Our long-term vision is far broader: to build the communication and coordination layer for the Autonomous Web, where every conversation has the potential to connect people, AI, applications, and value within one unified network.
