MoonPay has unveiled its new MoonAgents desktop application, which harnesses the power of AI assistants to manage cryptocurrency wallets and access various blockchain services. The innovative software currently supports accounts associated with Anthropic’s Claude and OpenAI’s Codex, aiming to make the setup process more accessible for users without a technical background.
The application secures wallet keys directly on the user’s device, encrypting them to protect sensitive information while simultaneously allowing AI assistants to facilitate transactions, payments, and other blockchain operations. Kevin Arifin, MoonPay’s Head of Agents, emphasized that the software simplifies the user experience: “All that stuff is hidden under the hood for you,” he noted. He explained that the desktop app operates behind the scenes to configure either Codex or Claude locally, offering a graphical interface for ease of use.
Initially launched as a command-line tool in February, MoonAgents has evolved, transferring its capabilities into a user-friendly desktop version. This transition allows users to connect their existing Claude or Codex accounts without having to go through manual configurations. The software is equipped with prebuilt Skills, scheduled Automations, and an Artifacts system designed to create custom dashboards and manage financial activities more effectively.
As AI technology becomes increasingly autonomous, concerns surrounding access and oversight have also come to the forefront. Incidents, such as the one reported by PocketOS founder Jeremy Crane where an AI agent unintentionally deleted production data through a single API call, highlight the potential risks involved. Additionally, security experts have raised alarms about prompt injection attacks, which can manipulate AI agents into unveiling sensitive data or executing unintended actions.
MoonPay aims to mitigate these security concerns by keeping private keys stored locally rather than relying on cloud servers. Arifin reinforced this approach, stating, “The most important piece of security is not revealing the private keys.” He elaborated that these keys are stored locally on the user’s computer, fully encrypted, ensuring that the AI models cannot access them.
The MoonAgents app represents another step in MoonPay’s efforts in integrating AI with cryptocurrency platforms. The company had previously launched an application allowing users to purchase cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Solana via ChatGPT merely through conversational prompts.
Arifin pointed out the primary advantage of the MoonAgents app: it enables AI models to operate directly on the user’s machine, interacting with blockchain services while safeguarding private credentials. “The LLM is not the answer in this case,” he remarked, emphasizing that the app empowers users to conduct thorough research into cryptocurrencies, a capability that has traditionally been limited to those skilled in coding or scripting.



