As a developer tool, integrating Stripe Projects felt a lot like adding "Sign in with Google" - Stripe acts as a trusted identity and billing provider, but for agents instead of humans. The core insight is that agent commerce is a trust problem: an agent can't (shouldn't?) enter a credit card or verify an email, so you need a trusted third party to KYC both sides. Stripe already has that relationship with both developers and customers.
It's a smooth experience overall - try it out.
I wrote more about agent experience here: https://www.philipithomas.com/agent-experience
Use cases: create accounts, set up billing, manage secrets, manage resources, get invoices/receipts
Finally, I don’t know if it’s better to use a CLI imperative approach or a more declarative one like IaC
Cloudflare, GitHub (if they shipped more), Anthropic and OpenAI are also in decent positions to do this.
I wrote notes on this previously [1]. If you believe agents are going to be big consumers, it's helpful to make things that today allow users of agents to easily discover and purchase services via apis.
I don't want to use a terminal, we should be moving away from this.
I really hope this becomes just a button or a mobile app instead and not have to keep using terminals all the time.
Stripe has the incentive to add platforms that use Stripe as a payment processor so they can cash on the payment fees, they don't really have any incentive to add a platform that doesn't bring money to them (except affiliates are possible with this)
Then again I also don't see the logic in asking spicy autocomplete to write code or provision services for you either.
Maybe I'm just not the target market. I guess if you're spinning up 5 new toy todo list apps a week to show off how well you can talk to a predictive text engine maybe this is actually useful.