#opg $OPG One thing I keep thinking about with AI is that most people focus on getting better answers.but very few talk about how AI is changing the way we make decisions.

Before AI.finding information was usually the hard part.Today information arrives instantly.The challenge is no longer access. The challenge is judgment.

When an AI system gives us a recommendation a summary.or even a strategy.we naturally assume it has already done the difficult thinking for us. That convenience is powerful but it can also make us less curious about the reasoning behind the result.

The interesting question is not whether AI will become smarter. It probably will.

The more important question is whether humans will remain actively involved in the thinking process or slowly become passive consumers of machine-generated conclusions.

This is why transparency matters so much. Not because people need to inspect every technical detail.

but because understanding how conclusions are formed helps preserve trust and accountability.

Technology has always been about extending human capability. AI is different because it also influences human judgment.That makes responsibility just as important as performance.

Maybe the future of AI will not be defined by which model produces the fastest answer.

Maybe it will be defined by which systems help people think more clearly instead of simply thinking on their behalf.

What do you think—should AI primarily optimize for efficiency, or should it encourage deeper human reasoning as well?#@OpenGradient $OPG #opgusdt