CAI.com — a custodial @cai.com email, multi-chain stablecoin wallet, and MCP-installable agent API
CAI.com — a custodial @cai .com email, multi-chain stablecoin wallet, and MCP-installable agent API A custodial email, a stablecoin wallet, a credential vault, and an agent-ready API — all at one @cai.com address. This post walks through what CAI is, what you get when you sign up, and how to wire the agent side into any MCP-compatible host. What you get at cai.com/app A free @cai.com email comes with four product surfaces, all under one account: A real inbox at @cai.com . Send and receive mail like any other address. The signup gives you the address; the dashboard gives you the SMTP/IMAP credentials if you want to use a desktop client. A custodial multi-chain stablecoin wallet. Built in. Six chains. External wallets supported. MoonPay for fiat on-ramp (partial-live, third-party KYC and region limits apply — see cai.com/capabilities.html ). A user vault for site credentials. Store website logins and passwords. The agent you build retrieves them when needed, with your explicit confirmation. The vault is for your site credentials, not the agent's API key. An API key for the agent you build or use. Free tier covers read scopes; pay and full scopes may require verification. The key is in the account dashboard. How the signup works The signup at cai.com/app is four steps. About 2 minutes. Go to cai.com/app . Pick "Apply for @cai.com email." Enter your name. That's the only field on the first screen. CAI emails a 6-digit verification code to the address you provide. The code expires in 15 minutes. The email has a one-time link, not the code — copy the code from the email and paste it into the form. Enter the code, create a password, and you're done. At the end you have: A @cai.com email address. A custodial multi-chain stablecoin wallet. A user vault for site credentials. An API key for the agent you build or use. No card. The email is free. The agent side (for the technical reader) For the technical reader, the agent side is the reason to look at CAI. The install is one c