I think one of the biggest mistakes people make in crypto is assuming every important project has to look loud in the beginning. Some of the strongest infrastructure usually develops quietly while the market chases faster narratives.

That’s partly why @OpenLedger has been on my radar lately.

Most AI discussions still revolve around consumer-facing tools, but I’m more interested in the backend economy forming underneath them. As AI agents, models, and automated systems become more active onlini, the demand for coordination between them grows too.

Not just technically, but economically.

OpenLedger feels like an early attempt to build Around that reality instead of simply attaching AI branding to a token. The idea of creating liquidity around data, models, and autonomous systems feels far more durable to me than another short-lived attention cycle.

Crypto has always been strongest when it builds invisible infrastructure people eventually depend on without Noticing.

Payments, settlement, liquidity, coordination the systems that survive are usually the ones solving friction at scale.

I’m still watching carefully, but projects thinking beyond short-term hype tend to matter more later.

$OPEN

#OpenLedger