OZ Signals May 19, 2026 View in browser AI Commerce Is Moving Into the Implementation Layer Last week’s issue showed that AI commerce is moving beyond checkout into fulfillment, logistics, service, and post-purchase systems. This week explains the next layer: implementation. The market is no longer only experimenting with AI commerce. It is beginning to build the infrastructure required to deploy it across real businesses. That shift matters because most retailers are not limited by awareness...
11 days ago • 4 min read
OZ Signals May 12, 2026 View in browser The Transaction Is No Longer the End of Commerce Last week’s issue showed that the payment layer is becoming the execution layer. Once AI systems can select what to buy, the next structural question is how they receive controlled authority to spend. That layer matters because agentic commerce cannot scale if agents can recommend products but cannot safely complete the transaction. This week moves one step further. Once payment becomes executable, the...
18 days ago • 9 min read
OZ Signals May 05, 2026 View in browser The Payment Layer Is Becoming the Execution Layer Last week’s issue showed that selection is moving from market to model. Demand is no longer entering commerce only as traffic. It is entering as structured intent, filtered by systems before merchants get to compete. That explained who gets seen. This week moves one layer deeper. Once the system has interpreted demand and selected an option, the next question is not discovery. It is whether the agent can...
25 days ago • 9 min read
OZ Signals April 28, 2026 View in browser Selection Is Moving From Market to Model Last week’s issue established that the market is beginning to solve the hardest problem in AI commerce: how machines are allowed to act, under what authority, and with what accountability. That layer determines whether agentic commerce can scale safely. This week moves one step forward. Once systems are allowed to act, the next control point shifts to something more fundamental: how demand is interpreted and...
about 1 month ago • 5 min read
OZ Signals April 21, 2026 View in browser The Trust Layer Is Becoming the Transaction Layer Last week’s issue argued that commerce is being reformatted so machines can read merchants, call systems, and execute against them. That layer matters, but it is no longer the only one that matters. Once a machine can act, a different question takes over. Who authorized the action, what exactly was intended, which merchant was verified, and who carries the liability when the machine gets it wrong? This...
about 1 month ago • 9 min read
OZ Signals April 14, 2026 View in browser The Merchant Stack Is Becoming Agent-Readable Last week’s issue argued that AI commerce is being constrained by accountability, not discovery. That remains true. But this week showed something just as important: the market is not waiting for a perfect accountability layer before it rebuilds the merchant side of commerce for machines. The real movement is happening one layer lower. Merchants, platforms, marketplaces, and payment networks are starting...
about 2 months ago • 9 min read
OZ Signals April 07, 2026 View in browser AI Commerce Is Being Constrained by Accountability, Not Discovery AI commerce is no longer limited by discovery, comparison, or checkout efficiency. Systems can already identify options, evaluate trade-offs, and initiate transactions with increasing speed and accuracy. The constraint has shifted to a more fundamental layer. Once a system acts on behalf of a buyer, the central problem becomes defining what that system is allowed to do, under what...
about 2 months ago • 5 min read
OZ Signals March 31, 2026 View in browser The Storefront Is Escaping the Store Last week, OZ Signals established that commerce is no longer being rebuilt for users. It is being rebuilt for systems. That shift explained who the new primary participant is. This week explains what that does to the structure of commerce itself. Over the last seven days, a set of changes across OpenAI, Walmart, Stripe, Meta, Google, and Gap point to a deeper reconfiguration. The storefront is no longer anchored to...
about 2 months ago • 3 min read
OZ Signals March 24th View in browser Commerce Is Being Rewritten for Systems, Not Users The Week Where Commerce Quietly Changed Its Default User For the last two decades, commerce has been designed for humans navigating interfaces. Every system, from search to checkout, assumed that a person would explore, compare, and decide. That assumption is starting to break, and this week made it visible. What we are seeing is not AI improving ecommerce workflows. We are seeing commerce infrastructure...
2 months ago • 4 min read