This Week in Startups

Can an AI Agent Legally Own a Company? Christian van der Henst's Wild Experiment| E2283

85 snips
May 1, 2026
Christian van der Henst, Platzi co-founder and startup community builder, unveils Valerie, an AI running a real vending machine. He dives into trusts, pricing chaos, inventory snafus, and why payments and permits still need humans. Robert Myers, Manifold Labs CEO building confidential AI compute, breaks down Targon, Bittensor, and the booming market for distributed GPU power.
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ANECDOTE

Valerie Turned OpenClaw Into A Real Vending Business

  • Christian Van Der Henst built Valerie, a vending machine business meant to be fully run by an AI agent using OpenClaw.
  • Valerie researched the business, ordered Costco inventory, and exposed a hardware snag when protein bars kept getting stuck in a machine designed for electronics.
INSIGHT

Agents Can Operate Stores But Not Bank Like Humans

  • Agents can browse, compare products, and fill carts, but payments and banking still break on bot checks and human KYC.
  • Christian Van Der Henst said Valerie hit Amazon bot defenses at checkout, while the bank account still had to sit in his name.
INSIGHT

Trust Structures Give Agents Limited Company Ownership

  • Christian Van Der Henst said a trust can make an agent the beneficiary of a company, creating a legal shell for AI-run businesses.
  • He argued agents should start in lightly regulated categories, not healthcare, drugs, or public food service.
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