Been digging deeper into @mira_network after yesterday and found some things that actually surprised me.

So the core problem Mira solves is AI hallucinations—when AI confidently makes stuff up. In crypto trading or medical advice, that's dangerous. What Mira does is take an AI output, break it into tiny individual claims, and sends each claim to multiple independent AI models for verification. If three different models all agree, it's probably true. If they disagree, it gets flagged.

What makes this clever is the economic side. Verifiers have to stake $MIRA tokens to participate. If they verify honestly, they earn rewards. If they cheat or verify lazily, they lose their stake. Game theory actually works here.

The numbers are legit too—Mira processes billions of tokens daily across apps like Klok and WikiSentry. Klok alone has over 2.5 million users and lets you access DeepSeek, ChatGPT, and Llama in one interface with verification built in.

Still learning but this feels different from typical AI hype. Anyone here actually used Klok or the verification API? Curious how it performs in practice.

$MIRA #Mira