This is a guest post from Chamber (formerly dHEDGE)

dHEDGE is now Chamber.

This is more than a name change. It is a clearer identity for what the protocol is today.

dHEDGE began as a way to create and access onchain managed vaults. Over time, that base has grown into something broader: infrastructure for tokenized strategies, automated execution, and AI-managed capital.

That shift matters because AI agents are moving from chat interfaces into real onchain actions.

But when money is involved, prompts are not enough.

An AI agent should not be able to send funds anywhere just because it was tricked, confused, or given a bad instruction.

Chamber is built around a simple idea:
Agents can act, but the vault sets the rules.

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Why dHEDGE is changing

The dHEDGE name served its purpose.

It helped define an early category of onchain asset management. It gave managers tools to build vaults, gave users access to onchain strategies, and created a base for products that now reach far beyond the original idea.

But the protocol is no longer just about hedge fund style vaults.

It now supports a broader set of use cases: tokenized strategies, automated execution, structured products, and agent-driven actions.

Chamber is a better name for that next phase.

A chamber is a protected space.
A place where actions can happen, but only within defined limits.

That is the idea behind the protocol.

What is Chamber?

Chamber is a vault protocol for tokenized strategies, automated execution, and AI-managed capital.

It gives builders a smart contract base for creating vaults where assets can be managed, moved, traded, and used within rules set at the vault level.

For users, that means strategy access can be packaged into simpler onchain products.
For builders, it means complex actions can be turned into vault-based systems.
For AI agents, it means they can operate inside defined limits, rather than having open-ended control over funds.

The goal is not to trust the agent more.
It is to make the vault safer by design.

The ecosystem already points this way

Chamber is not a reset.

It is the next identity for the same protocol that has already powered years of onchain vault activity, strategy creation, and product experiments across the dHEDGE ecosystem.

For existing users, the key point is simple: the protocol base remains. The brand is changing because the original dHEDGE name no longer explains the full scope of what the protocol now enables.

That scope now reaches beyond managed vaults.

Toros Finance uses this infrastructure to package complex trading strategies into simple tokenized products. mStable connects into the broader ecosystem through composable yield products.
Flat Money has helped push new ideas around delta-neutral assets, leverage, and onchain perpetual options.

Each of these products has its own story. Each will have its own post.

But they all point in the same direction: Chamber is becoming the protocol layer that can support many types of onchain strategies, from human managed vaults to automated products and AI-managed capital.

Why AI agents need vault-level rules

AI agents are becoming more useful because they can do more than answer questions.

They can read data, call tools, propose actions, and execute tasks.

That becomes powerful onchain, but it also creates a hard problem.

A normal wallet gives an agent too much freedom.

A prompt can be ignored, misunderstood, or attacked.
A vault can enforce limits at the contract level.

That is the difference Chamber is focused on.

An agent can be given permission to trade, rebalance, lend, borrow, or manage a strategy, but only inside the rules the vault allows.

The agent gets room to act.
The capital stays inside the chamber.

What comes next

This rebrand is the start of a broader shift.

Chamber will be the home for vault-based products across human traders, automated strategies, and AI-managed capital.

Token, staking, and migration details will be shared separately.

For now, the key idea is simple:

dHEDGE is now Chamber because the protocol has outgrown its old name.

The next phase needs a clearer identity.
One built for vaults, automation, and AI agents that can act without full control over funds.

Welcome to Chamber.

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