$HYPE Aster is way ahead of Zhao, caught a whole bunch of shorts, likely heading towards the $100 mark. Hope Zhao can push a bit too! $BTC
My roommate, who collects second-hand servers like a true geek, is actually a free laborer for AI.
Last week, my college buddy sent me screenshots at midnight, saying he used three junkyard servers to run the #OpenLedger node and made some $OPEN . He was as excited as if he'd found Satoshi's private key, claiming he had finally become a digital knight breaking the giants' monopoly. I took a glance at his meager profits and almost sprayed my iced cola all over the screen.
This so-called hyped-up hash economy hides a cold-blooded set of rules written in code. The system quietly scores and ranks each node. If the content you upload doesn't provide something unique for the big model, the algorithm will silently cast you into the cold palace, your output weight will drop so low you won't even be able to get a sip of soup, just like the slowest apprentice in a factory who does the hardest work for the least pay.
The little tokens you painstakingly scrape together can’t be smoothly cashed out in the early stages; you have to obediently reinvest them back into the system to maintain your node's reputation, or else you won't even get that tiny morsel. This isn’t an economic cycle; it’s a gentle trap that keeps you deeper and deeper ensnared. @OpenLedger
Those shouting for decentralized liberation of hash power essentially treat retail investors as cyber temps without social security. Your contributed bandwidth and hard drive space are just free food for their AI model, and those precisely calculated rewards are just enough to keep you from pulling the plug. One day when the B-end orders are pulled, this bustling hash network will instantly turn into a silent digital graveyard. That’s when my roommate will realize he was never a world-changing geek; he’s merely a digital consumable sold at a marked price.
My roommate, who collects second-hand servers like a true geek, is actually a free laborer for AI.
Last week, my college buddy sent me screenshots at midnight, saying he used three junkyard servers to run the #OpenLedger node and made some $OPEN . He was as excited as if he'd found Satoshi's private key, claiming he had finally become a digital knight breaking the giants' monopoly. I took a glance at his meager profits and almost sprayed my iced cola all over the screen.
This so-called hyped-up hash economy hides a cold-blooded set of rules written in code. The system quietly scores and ranks each node. If the content you upload doesn't provide something unique for the big model, the algorithm will silently cast you into the cold palace, your output weight will drop so low you won't even be able to get a sip of soup, just like the slowest apprentice in a factory who does the hardest work for the least pay.
The little tokens you painstakingly scrape together can’t be smoothly cashed out in the early stages; you have to obediently reinvest them back into the system to maintain your node's reputation, or else you won't even get that tiny morsel. This isn’t an economic cycle; it’s a gentle trap that keeps you deeper and deeper ensnared. @OpenLedger
Those shouting for decentralized liberation of hash power essentially treat retail investors as cyber temps without social security. Your contributed bandwidth and hard drive space are just free food for their AI model, and those precisely calculated rewards are just enough to keep you from pulling the plug. One day when the B-end orders are pulled, this bustling hash network will instantly turn into a silent digital graveyard. That’s when my roommate will realize he was never a world-changing geek; he’s merely a digital consumable sold at a marked price.
open给我冲冲冲
36%
归零币,小丑一个🤡
64%
11 votes • Voting closed