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Billing for intelligence: how the value exchange hub will define the internet of agents

Ye Ouyang, CEO and CTO at AsiaInfo Technologies, discusses how the Internet of Agents (IOA) is reshaping billing, shifting focus from data usage to real-time valuation of intelligence, decisions, and outcomes.

Ye Ouyang, PhD, IEEE Fellow, IET FellowYe Ouyang, PhD, IEEE Fellow, IET Fellow
23 Apr 2026
Billing for intelligence: how the value exchange hub will define the internet of agents

Billing for intelligence: how the value exchange hub will define the internet of agents

We are standing at the edge of the biggest shift our industry has ever seen. For decades, we have defined ourselves by the networks we build. But the future is not just about connecting people or things—it is about connecting intelligence.

We are moving toward the Internet of Agents (IoA) . Today, most billing infrastructures are built for predictable, human-driven contracts. They track bytes, minutes, and monthly subscriptions. The IoA operates on milliseconds, micro-transactions, and dynamic value. Millions of real-time machine-to-machine interactions will take place, where the “product” is no longer a data plan—it is an insight, a decision, or an optimized outcome. If we do not reimagine the billing engine, we risk losing not just efficiency, but the opportunity itself. Central to this transformation is how we bill for the token, the fundamental unit of value in the IoA economy. A token is no longer merely a data packet; it encapsulates intent, insight, decision rights, and execution outcomes. To unlock its full potential, we must clearly define what a token represents—whether it carries raw data, refined intelligence, “perfect information,” or a completed commercial decision.

Pricing must become dynamic, based on its intelligence density or economic value. A token that triggers a million-dollar transaction carries far greater weight than a simple query. As tokens flow between agents, they can also embed smart contracts that enable real-time value sharing.

In this context, billing evolves from a simple tolling model into a real-time system for valuing and distributing decision outcomes and computational effort. To support this shift, the billing system must evolve from a back-office ledger into something far more strategic: a real-time value exchange hub for the IoA economy. 

This requires rethinking long-standing assumptions and rebuilding around three core principles:

  • From selling pipes to pricing intelligence
    We can no longer charge by byte. When an AI agent provides “perfect information” that could save logistics company millions, the value lies in the decision—not in the data transmitted.

    We need models such as the expected value of perfect information (EVPI) to quantify the value of an insight when it is delivered. By measuring how much the agent’s output improves the current decision baseline, insight generation becomes a billable event. This reduces settlement delays and better incentivizes high-quality agents.

  • From static billing to autonomous value networks
    Transactions will no longer be simple buyer–seller exchanges. They will become complex interactions involving dynamic networks of agents, data providers, and services.

    Billing must evolve into an orchestration layer that supports real-time revenue sharing and profit distribution across multiple participants, governed by smart contracts that execute instantly without manual intervention.

  • From batch processing to an event-driven fabric
    The underlying engine must be rebuilt from the ground up. We need a machine-native, streaming core that can authorize transactions, process micropayments, and settle accounts in milliseconds.

    Billing must move from month-end batch processing to a real-time, event-driven fabric that enables continuous value exchange. This is not just about speed; it is about intelligent, real-time pricing.

    We need a transaction engine that integrates a hierarchical deep reinforcement learning model (HDRL-MDIB) that can balance micro-level compute costs with macro-level business urgency and deliver optimized pricing. Higher prices help smooth peak demand, while lower prices attract batch workloads during off-peak periods, maximizing revenue while ensuring fair access.

The strategic imperative

This transformation is complex, but it is also our most important strategic lever.

For CSPs, this is not just an IT upgrade; it is about securing a central role in the IoA economy. By operating a neutral, high-performance value exchange hub, CSPs can move beyond connectivity and become a foundational platform for agent-driven commerce. This enables a shift from declining connectivity revenue to high-margin, value-based services. Three core capabilities are central to this evolution:

  • Foundation & visibility: Establishing unified data models and real-time monitoring systems to provide comprehensive insight into agent-driven activity and resource consumption.
  • Intelligent control: Applying real-time authorization, adaptive policy enforcement, and automated risk mitigation to maintain trust and operational stability.
  • Value assessment & settlement: Utilizing AI-driven systems to measure agent contributions, facilitate dynamic, multi-party revenue distribution, and support alternative compensation models, such as outcome-based pricing.

The Internet of Agents will redefine value creation and exchange, with billing and monetization at its essential core. Thriving in the agent-driven era requires more than technology—it demands a strategic reinvention of the enterprise's role: shifting from connectivity provider to enabler of trusted, autonomous commerce. Leaders must look beyond the present and architect the foundations of this new economy now. The organizations that succeed will be those whose operational core becomes the central nervous system of a truly collaborative, agent-native world.