Automation doesn’t fail because it moves too fast. It fails because no one can trace who authorized an action, which system executed it, or whether it stayed within limits. Vanar Chain is built to solve that gap by acting as a financial coordination layer, not just another execution network. At the center of Vanar’s design is a clean separation between User, Agent, and Session. Users remain the source of accountability. They create Agents with clearly scoped permissions—pay invoices within limits, move liquidity only across approved pools, or place trades inside predefined price ranges. This is delegated intelligence, not blind automation. Sessions turn authority into time-bound execution windows. Each session is timestamped, threshold-aware, and automatically enforced. If limits are reached or conditions break, execution stops instantly. Every action is logged on-chain, producing session-level proofs that support real-time auditing and compliance. Through Kite, Vanar adds guardrails: cryptographic identities, automatic rejection of unverified agents, and agents that report as they act. Provenance persists across chains and departments, turning distributed automation into traceable collaboration. As automation becomes unavoidable, Vanar asks a harder question: can finance scale without losing responsibility?

$VANRY

@Vanarchain

#vanar