Stripe has the incentive to add platforms that use Stripe as a payment processor so they can cash on the payment fees, they don't really have any incentive to add a platform that doesn't bring money to them (except affiliates are possible with this)
As a developer tool, integrating Stripe Projects felt a lot like adding "Sign in with Google" - Stripe acts as a trusted identity and billing provider, but for agents instead of humans. The core insight is that agent commerce is a trust problem: an agent can't (shouldn't?) enter a credit card or verify an email, so you need a trusted third party to KYC both sides. Stripe already has that relationship with both developers and customers.
It's a smooth experience overall - try it out.
I wrote more about agent experience here: https://www.philipithomas.com/agent-experience
> Maybe time for their own .stripe TLD or something
How about subdomains? Free and widely supported already, won't confuse anyone either.
Then again I also don't see the logic in asking spicy autocomplete to write code or provision services for you either.
Maybe I'm just not the target market. I guess if you're spinning up 5 new toy todo list apps a week to show off how well you can talk to a predictive text engine maybe this is actually useful.
When your application runs on VMs you control and just uses a payment gateway and an email gateway it's hardly a challenge to get the services setup.
Cloudflare, GitHub (if they shipped more), Anthropic and OpenAI are also in decent positions to do this.
I wrote notes on this previously [1]. If you believe agents are going to be big consumers, it's helpful to make things that today allow users of agents to easily discover and purchase services via apis.
gonzalovargas•2h ago
Use cases: create accounts, set up billing, manage secrets, manage resources, get invoices/receipts
Finally, I don’t know if it’s better to use a CLI imperative approach or a more declarative one like IaC
steve_adams_86•1h ago
Declarative solutions are perfectly fast and capable as well. They can use all the same tooling under the hood. Why choose imperative? At least I can record, validate, and version control a declarative solution. And imperative process is nice for exploration and one-off needs, but... I don't know when I'd really need that or when that's a bottleneck for me.
And I get that this is probably more of a tool for agents than humans, despite that agents are only mentioned in passing. But that's even more concerning in a way. I'm not yet comfortable with giving them tools like this.