The agents are coming. So is the spend.
Financial rails for autonomous agents are arriving fast. The layer that decides what's allowed — and proves what happened — is still missing. That layer is the whole point of Greene Comply.
For the first time, software can decide to spend money on its own. An agent can book the flight, top up the API credits, pay the toll, settle the invoice — at machine speed, around the clock, without a human in the loop. The rails to do this are being built right now.
Rails are not governance.A wallet that can pay can also be tricked into paying. An agent that can transact can drain a budget before an alert fires. And when something goes wrong, scattered logs won’t tell you what was authorized, by whom, or why. The infrastructure providers say so themselves — their terms disclaim governance, compliance, and risk. That disclaimed layer is exactly what the economy is missing.
We believe autonomy without accountability is a liability, not a feature. Every dollar an agent moves should pass through a gate that asks: is this allowed, and can we prove it? Limits should be enforced before money moves, not reconciled after. Human approval should be a setting, not a scramble. And the record should be immutable, not improvised.
So we built the control plane for it. Greene Comply sits on top of the rails — Circle ships the settlement; we decide what’s permitted, hold what needs a human, and pin every decision to an audit trail. We never hold your funds. We give every agent an identity worth trusting and every transaction a paper trail worth keeping.
Vesper is our proof. A governed agent that actually spends — inside hard limits, settling in USDC, denied the moment it tries to step out of line. Not a demo of what could be safe; a demonstration that it already is.
Agents will spend. Our job is to make every dollar accountable.