Theta Labs and XYO are developing a blockchain-based verification layer for AI agents running on Theta EdgeCloud, aiming to give enterprises an independent record of whether agent workloads were executed on reliable infrastructure.
The partnership brings together two long-running DePIN projects.
Theta operates a hybrid cloud-edge computing platform for AI, video, rendering and gaming, while XYO has built infrastructure around cryptographic proof for real-world data and recently expanded into a data-focused Layer 1 network.
The companies said XYO nodes will monitor Theta EdgeCloud workloads and record quality-of-service data, including uptime, latency, speed and throughput.
Those measurements will be written to XYO Layer One and XYO Data Lakes, creating tamper-evident attestations for AI agent activity.
The goal is to address a growing problem in enterprise AI: agents are being given more autonomy, but their execution records often remain inside systems controlled by the same provider responsible for running the infrastructure.
That creates a weak point for procurement, compliance and incident review.
“Enterprises don’t deploy infrastructure on good faith. They require auditable records, defensible performance data, and clear accountability chains,” Markus Levin, Co-founder of XYO, said in a statement shared with AlexaBlockchain.
“This collaboration gives organizations running AI agents on EdgeCloud independently verified, tamper-evident attestations settled on XYO Layer One. For compliance teams, procurement leads, and anyone responsible for infrastructure decisions, that’s non-negotiable. That’s the standard that agentic AI deployments now need to meet,” Markus added.
Why does it matter?
AI agents are moving from experimental tools to production systems.
McKinsey’s 2025 global AI survey found that 88% of organizations used AI in at least one business function, while 23% were scaling agentic AI systems somewhere in their enterprise.
That shift raises a practical question.
When an autonomous system gives a wrong answer, misses a step, overspends, or fails to respond, companies need to know whether the failure came from the model, the data source, the workflow, or the underlying compute layer.
Theta and XYO are targeting the infrastructure part of that chain.
The partnership does not verify whether an AI answer is factually correct. Instead, it focuses on whether the workload ran under measurable service conditions.
That distinction matters.
For enterprise users, verifiable uptime, latency and throughput data can support service-level agreement checks, vendor reviews, insurance claims, regulatory reporting and post-incident investigations.
Theta brings production AI agent use cases
Theta EdgeCloud is already being used in sports and entertainment.
Theta has already done AI agent deployments or planned deployments involving Olympique de Marseille, the Houston Rockets, Philadelphia Union, San Jose Earthquakes and other sports organizations.
The Houston Rockets partnered with Theta Labs on “ClutchBot,” an AI agent for the team’s official website.
The New Jersey Devils also launched an AI chatbot powered by Theta EdgeCloud, describing it as an educational and entertainment resource for fans.
“As our AI agents handle thousands of fan interactions across the NBA, NHL, MLS and beyond, independent verification of infrastructure performance is becoming a baseline expectation,” Mitch Liu, CEO of Theta Labs, said.
“XYO brings exactly that to EdgeCloud. A third-party attestation layer that gives our customers, and their fans, confidence that every interaction is backed by infrastructure performing as promised,” Mitch added.
Theta’s broader network also includes enterprise validators such as Google, Samsung and Sony.
The compliance angle
The timing is relevant because AI governance rules are becoming more demanding.
The EU AI Act requires high-risk AI systems to support automatic event logging over their lifetime. Article 26 also requires deployers of high-risk AI systems to keep logs for at least six months where those logs are under their control.
That does not mean every AI chatbot will fall under high-risk rules.
But it does show where enterprise AI governance is heading: more traceability, clearer responsibility and better records of system behavior.
For DePIN networks, this creates a possible opening.
Decentralized compute projects have often competed on cost, GPU access and availability. Theta and XYO are trying to add another layer: independent proof that the infrastructure performed as claimed.
The idea is part of a broader move toward verifiable compute and tamper-evident records
Space and Time, a Microsoft-backed verifiable data warehouse, uses Proof of SQL to let users prove that database queries were executed correctly without tampering. Google Cloud has also described Space and Time’s work as verifiable compute for Web3 developers.
Chainlink’s Proof of Reserve takes a related approach in digital assets, using oracle infrastructure to provide automated verification of reserves backing tokenized or wrapped assets.
In AI governance, open-source tools are also appearing.
Asqav, for example, signs AI agent actions and chains them into a tamper-evident audit trail.
Theta and XYO’s effort differs by focusing on infrastructure performance for agent workloads, rather than database queries, asset reserves, or internal action logs.
The larger test
The partnership gives Theta a way to differentiate EdgeCloud beyond cheaper or decentralized compute.
It gives XYO a new enterprise use case for its proof infrastructure.
But adoption will depend on whether enterprises treat third-party blockchain attestations as useful evidence in real procurement and compliance workflows.
However, the move reflects a larger shift in AI infrastructure.
As AI agents get more autonomy, companies are no longer asking only whether the model can perform a task. They are also asking whether every part of the system can be independently verified when something goes wrong.
The above article “Enterprise AI Agents Still Lack Independent Audit Trails. Theta and XYO Want to Change That” was first published on AlexaBlockchain. Read the complete article here: https://alexablockchain.com/theta-xyo-build-blockchain-audit-trail-for-enterprise-ai-agents/
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