- Matterhorn and the ASI Alliance are launching a safety-first system for AI-generated blockchain apps.
- The platform combines automated analysis, human review, templates, and testing before deployment.
- The push comes as more crypto platforms move toward AI-native trading and app development.
Matterhorn and the Artificial Superintelligence Alliance are rolling out new tools aimed at making AI-generated smart contracts safer for crypto. The initiative focuses on “vibe coding,” a workflow where developers describe an app in plain language, and AI generates the underlying code.
The companies are trying to solve a growing problem in blockchain development. AI can speed up app creation and lower the barrier to entry, yet it can also generate flawed contracts that expose users to hacks, stuck funds, or broken logic. The new system is designed to slow that risk before code reaches mainnet.
Matterhorn Adds Audits to AI-Generated Code
Matterhorn says its platform will combine automated analysis, outside audit support, and human review to check AI-generated smart contracts before deployment. Founder Abhinav Ramesh says the company is working with security audit firms and AI agents that can run “agentic audits,” but he also says those checks should not be the only review layer for mainnet applications.
The platform is also introducing “blessed templates” and testing tools tailored to ASI: Chain. The goal is to make contract creation easier without treating speed as the main objective. Matterhorn says builders handling real users and real money need stronger review systems, not just faster code generation.
ASI: Chain Becomes the Base For the New Workflow
The initiative is built around ASI: Chain, the blockchain network developed by the Artificial Superintelligence Alliance. Matterhorn says developers will be able to build, audit, and deploy decentralized apps from one environment, while ASI: Cloud will provide the compute layer for the AI systems generating and analyzing code.
The companies are also planning deeper integrations across the ASI stack, including ASI: One, Z.AI models, and wallet support. SingularityNET’s Khellar Crawford says the industry has relied too often on a patch-and-pray model, where developers write contracts first and hope auditors catch the flaws later. He argues the new system should move closer to mathematically verified safety rather than post-launch correction.
Crypto Infrastructure Moves Into AI-Native Design
The launch comes as more crypto platforms build products around AI-native workflows. Earlier this year, Bitget launched Agent Hub to support AI-driven trading through standardized interfaces and exchange-maintained tooling.
That move focused on connecting AI agents to live markets. Matterhorn and ASI Alliance are focusing instead on the earlier part of the stack: building safer code before live deployment.
The teams say they want to onboard 20,000 builders in 2026, alongside one million model calls and 500 active compute instances in the first quarter after launch. That target shows how fast the market is moving.
AI is no longer being treated as an experiment around crypto apps. It is becoming part of the production workflow, and the current push is about making that workflow safer before it scales further.
Related: Bitget Positions Itself as an AI-Native Exchange With New Agent Hub Launch
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