I'll be honest.
Everyone is chasing AI agents right now. New bots, new assistants, new tools claiming they'll automate trading, research, and everything in between. That's where the attention is. That's where the money is flowing.
But I think the market is looking at the wrong layer.
The real challenge isn't making AI smarter. It's making AI trustworthy.
Think about it. As AI starts handling liquidity, executing trades, managing treasuries, and coordinating on-chain activity, who verifies what the model is actually doing? Who proves the output wasn't manipulated? Who ensures the system can be trusted when real capital is involved?
That's the problem most people aren't talking about.
@OpenGradient isn't just another AI product competing for users. It's building decentralized infrastructure for hosting, running, and verifying AI models at scale. That may sound less exciting than the latest AI agent, but infrastructure is often where the biggest value accrues.
Crypto already taught us that trust matters more than promises. Blockchains won because they made verification possible. AI is heading toward the same crossroads.
If autonomous systems become a core part of financial markets, the networks that make AI transparent, verifiable, and accountable could become far more important than the applications themselves.
That's why I think OpenGradient is being viewed too narrowly today.
@OpenGradient #OPG $OPG
Everyone is chasing AI agents right now. New bots, new assistants, new tools claiming they'll automate trading, research, and everything in between. That's where the attention is. That's where the money is flowing.
But I think the market is looking at the wrong layer.
The real challenge isn't making AI smarter. It's making AI trustworthy.
Think about it. As AI starts handling liquidity, executing trades, managing treasuries, and coordinating on-chain activity, who verifies what the model is actually doing? Who proves the output wasn't manipulated? Who ensures the system can be trusted when real capital is involved?
That's the problem most people aren't talking about.
@OpenGradient isn't just another AI product competing for users. It's building decentralized infrastructure for hosting, running, and verifying AI models at scale. That may sound less exciting than the latest AI agent, but infrastructure is often where the biggest value accrues.
Crypto already taught us that trust matters more than promises. Blockchains won because they made verification possible. AI is heading toward the same crossroads.
If autonomous systems become a core part of financial markets, the networks that make AI transparent, verifiable, and accountable could become far more important than the applications themselves.
That's why I think OpenGradient is being viewed too narrowly today.
@OpenGradient #OPG $OPG
