Autonolas (OLAS) is the native token of a protocol that enables decentralised autonomous off-chain services. OLAS is used for governance, bonding, incentivising developers, and securing the ecosystem through staking. It supports a modular software architecture designed for building agent-based systems that are both off-chain and anchored to on-chain governance and incentives.

Autonolas (OLAS) is the native utility and governance token of the Autonolas protocol, a framework for building decentralised off-chain autonomous services known as agent services. These services are designed to operate continuously, make decisions independently, interact with external systems, and maintain crypto-native properties such as decentralisation and transparency.

The Autonolas protocol provides infrastructure to create, manage and incentivise the development of these agent services. Each service consists of multiple agents that use consensus gadgets to coordinate off-chain and anchor their operations on-chain via smart contracts. The platform is built around a modular, composable stack that includes components for messaging, blockchain interaction, business logic, and service governance.

OLAS is deployed as an ERC-20 token on Ethereum and plays a central role in coordinating the economic and governance activities of the Autonolas ecosystem.

OLAS has several core functions within the Autonolas ecosystem:

  • Governance Participation: OLAS can be locked to mint veOLAS, a non-transferable token that grants voting rights in the Autonolas DAO. Holders of veOLAS vote on protocol upgrades, treasury decisions, and other governance parameters.
  • Bonding: Users can provide liquidity via LP tokens and sell them to the protocol in exchange for discounted OLAS, contributing to protocol-owned liquidity (PoL). The bonding system is designed to grow capital in parallel with useful agent service code contributions.
  • Developer Incentives: Developers can register their agent components and canonical agents as NFTs. These are rewarded based on usage in services that generate donations to the protocol. Token emissions support top-ups to developers of widely-used or productive code.
  • Service Access and Incentives: Service owners can lock OLAS to receive veOLAS, which enables whitelisting of their services for additional rewards. They can also donate to the protocol, which is then distributed to code contributors.
  • Staking and Slashing: Agent operators may need to lock deposits (in native tokens) to operate services. Misbehaviour is penalised through slashing, adding a security layer to decentralised service execution.