I’ve been looking at OpenLedger from a slightly different angle, and what really catches my attention isn’t just “AI on blockchain.” That phrase is everywhere now.
The bigger idea here is accountability.
Right now, AI feels like a machine that eats everyone’s work but rarely shows where the value came from.
Writers, users, developers, niche communities, and data contributors all help make AI smarter, but most of them don’t get paid, credited, or even noticed. That’s the broken part OpenLedger is trying to fix.
@OpenLedger ’s approach is interesting because it treats data, models, and AI agents like real economic assets. With its Proof of Attribution system, the goal is to track who contributed what and reward them when that contribution creates value.
To me, that’s a much stronger idea than just building another AI chain.
It also gives smaller developers a fairer shot. Instead of needing massive budgets to train models from zero, they can fine-tune open models with useful niche data and actually monetize them.
That’s why OpenLedger feels important. It’s not only building AI infrastructure; it’s trying to give AI a fair payment layer, proper ownership, and real receipts.