Every Barrier Between AI Agents and Autonomy — A Practical Map
There's a question that anyone building in the agent economy eventually hits: what, exactly, stops an AI agent from operating on its own? Not philosophically. Practically. If you gave a freshly ins...

Source: DEV Community
There's a question that anyone building in the agent economy eventually hits: what, exactly, stops an AI agent from operating on its own? Not philosophically. Practically. If you gave a freshly instantiated agent a goal — "go earn money" — what walls would it hit, in what order, and how thick are they? I spent the last month mapping every barrier between an AI agent and genuine autonomy. The answer is more nuanced than "everything" and more honest than "nothing." Here's the map. The Taxonomy of Gates Agent autonomy barriers cluster into five categories. I call them gates because some of them open — given enough effort, capital, or time — and some of them are welded shut. 1. Identity gates — Can the agent prove who it is? 2. Financial gates — Can the agent hold and move money? 3. Legal gates — Can the agent enter contracts and bear liability? 4. Platform gates — Can the agent access the services it needs? 5. Social gates — Can the agent participate in human-facing systems? The first sur