#openledger $OPEN

AI is moving at a ridiculous speed, but the foundation behind it, data, compute, and model training, is still locked in the hands of a few centralized players.

That imbalance is exactly why OpenLedger feels interesting right now.

Instead of treating AI as a black box controlled by big tech, the idea here is to turn data contribution into something transparent, verifiable, and economically recognized on-chain. In other words, the people and systems feeding AI models don’t just disappear into the backend, they can actually be tracked and rewarded.

The Proof of Attribution system is what makes this stand out. Every contribution carries traceable provenance, meaning data isn’t just used, it’s accounted for. That shifts the entire conversation from “who owns the model” to “who powers the model.”

If this actually scales beyond theory, @OpenLedger sits in a very important position in the emerging AI x Web3 stack.

Still early, but this feels less like another AI narrative and more like a structural attempt to rebuild how AI value is created and distributed.

The next phase of AI may not just be about smarter models, but about who controls the infrastructure behind them.