@OpenLedger #OpenLedger $OPEN
I’ve been thinking honestly… most “decentralized AI” projects still feel more like branding exercises than actual infrastructure.
Everybody talks about agents, automation, and on-chain intelligence like decentralization magically removes power concentration overnight.
It doesn’t.
Usually the power just shifts somewhere less visible.
That’s why OpenLedger caught my attention. Not because it promises some perfect AI future, but because it’s focused on the liquidity layer behind data, models, and agents instead of just selling another AI narrative.
And that’s where things get interesting.
The bigger decentralized AI ecosystems become, the more they depend on trust, reputation, verification, and coordination. Somebody still decides which models matter, which datasets get visibility, and which contributors gain influence.
People don’t talk about that enough.
Real decentralization isn’t just putting things on-chain. It’s figuring out how to distribute coordination without quietly rebuilding the same centralized structures again.
That’s the hard part.
