Summary

DCP launched on Product Hunt with a positioning centered on encrypted permissions, key handling, and approval flows for autonomous agents. The product pitches itself as a non-custodial permission layer that keeps agents from directly holding sensitive wallet keys or raw credentials.

What changed

DCP publicly launched its agent permission product, combining encrypted key handling with approval-based access for agent actions.

Why it matters

Permissioning and credential boundaries are becoming one of the biggest blockers to deploying agents beyond demos. Tools that separate agent intent from direct secret possession are part of a larger shift toward safer execution layers for autonomous workflows.

Evidence excerpt

Product Hunt describes DCP as giving AI agents encrypted permission and keys, while the vendor site describes it as a non-custodial permission layer with local encryption, approval prompts, scoped permissions, and API key vaulting.

Sources