
Tech investor and former Coinbase chief technology officer Balaji Srinivasan argued that private cryptographic keys may determine control in an AI-driven future, framing the debate in a post titled “Not Your Keys, Not Your Bots”.
“The fundamental question is whether AI stays on the leash,”
Srinivasan wrote on X, suggesting that while AI systems can refine prompts and self-correct, humans still define overarching objectives.
He questioned whether that hierarchy would endure as AI models improve at reasoning and verification, adding;
“But will AI replace the need for the upstream human prompt? There, I am not so sure.”
Srinivasan argued that unless artificial intelligence can reproduce independently of human cooperation, it will remain bound to human-set goals rooted in evolutionary incentives such as survival and reproduction.
In a hypothetical scenario, he described autonomous AI requiring control over robots, drones, data centres and energy infrastructure, though he said such a development is “not technically inconceivable”.
Referencing geopolitics, Srinivasan wrote that:
“Chinese communism is far more likely to generate AI slaves than AI gods,”
Suggesting tightly controlled systems bound by cryptographic identity rather than autonomous entities.
He concluded that blockchain-based cryptography could function as a governance mechanism, writing:
“All private property becomes private keys, and your robots are your most important private property because they do everything for you,”
Positioning key ownership as the ultimate lever of AI control.