I’ve been following the growth of @anoma’s builder ecosystem, and @FlutonIO helps show what is possible
Fluton calls itself the first confidential, intent-centric cross-chain liquidity protocol — and the way they’re approaching privacy, automation, and modularity makes a lot of sense in the context of Anoma’s vision.
1. Privacy as a First-Class Citizen
Anoma has always argued that intents need to be expressive and private. Fluton is taking that idea into DeFi:
• Non-Confidential → visible intents.
• Semi-Confidential → shielded against MEV by encrypting key details.
• Fully-Confidential → intents are fully encrypted with FHE, so even execution happens without revealing the underlying data.
This is a big unlock: without privacy, strategies get leaked; with privacy, liquidity and automation can scale to institutional use.
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2. Cross-Chain Liquidity in a Modular Future
Anoma’s design is all about coordination across many chains and rollups. Fluton builds directly into that future by abstracting away fragmentation:
• Intents are routed cross-chain.
• Wallet-agnostic SDK.
• Compatible with AI agents like Eliza.
The net effect? You just state your intent, and Fluton (via Anoma’s architecture) handles routing, privacy, and execution.
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3. Automation + AI Agents
Fluton adds its own twist with Fluton Hooks and an AI agent that scans across connected dApps to identify yield and automate strategies.
This is exactly the kind of thing Anoma’s intent system was designed for — a world where users express goals, and the underlying infrastructure figures out the how.
------------------------
TLDR:
Anoma’s intent architecture enables protocols like Fluton to merge privacy, automation, and cross-chain execution under one roof.
Together, Anoma and Fluton point toward a future where DeFi more like setting your goals and letting the system handle the rest.
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I’ve been following the growth of @anoma’s builder ecosystem, and @FlutonIO helps show what is possible
Fluton calls itself the first confidential, intent-centric cross-chain liquidity protocol — and the way they’re approaching privacy, automation, and modularity makes a lot of sense in the context of Anoma’s vision.
1. Privacy as a First-Class Citizen
Anoma has always argued that intents need to be expressive and private. Fluton is taking that idea into DeFi:
• Non-Confidential → visible intents.
• Semi-Confidential → shielded against MEV by encrypting key details.
• Fully-Confidential → intents are fully encrypted with FHE, so even execution happens without revealing the underlying data.
This is a big unlock: without privacy, strategies get leaked; with privacy, liquidity and automation can scale to institutional use.
------------------------
2. Cross-Chain Liquidity in a Modular Future
Anoma’s design is all about coordination across many chains and rollups. Fluton builds directly into that future by abstracting away fragmentation:
• Intents are routed cross-chain.
• Wallet-agnostic SDK.
• Compatible with AI agents like Eliza.
The net effect? You just state your intent, and Fluton (via Anoma’s architecture) handles routing, privacy, and execution.
------------------------
3. Automation + AI Agents
Fluton adds its own twist with Fluton Hooks and an AI agent that scans across connected dApps to identify yield and automate strategies.
This is exactly the kind of thing Anoma’s intent system was designed for — a world where users express goals, and the underlying infrastructure figures out the how.
------------------------
TLDR:
Anoma’s intent architecture enables protocols like Fluton to merge privacy, automation, and cross-chain execution under one roof.
Together, Anoma and Fluton point toward a future where DeFi more like setting your goals and letting the system handle the rest.