Mira Network, it’s generally positioned as a decentralized infrastructure layer focused on AI verification and coordination.
At a high level, Mira Network is trying to address a growing problem in AI: trust. As models become more autonomous—especially in on-chain environments—the question isn’t just what they output, but whether those outputs can be independently verified. Mira leans into cryptographic proofs, distributed validation, and decentralized coordination to make AI-generated results more transparent and auditable.
What makes it interesting is the timing. We’re entering a phase where AI agents aren’t just generating text—they’re executing trades, triggering smart contracts, and interacting with other agents. In that context, “verifiable AI” isn’t just branding; it becomes infrastructure.
That said, like many projects in this space, the real test is adoption.