I keep coming back to one thought about OpenLedger.

Everyone is busy chasing AI models, compute power, and the next breakthrough in intelligence. But the deeper I look, the more I feel the market is focusing on the visible layers while ignoring the foundation underneath.

I spent time digging into OpenLedger, and what caught my attention wasn't the hype. It was the coordination problem.

AI doesn't run on models alone. It runs on data, contributors, infrastructure, incentives, and networks of participants working together. Yet most of the value today seems concentrated at the top while the people and systems creating that value often remain invisible.

That's where OpenLedger starts to get interesting.

I see it less as an AI project and more as an attempt to build an economic layer for intelligence itself. A place where data, models, compute resources, and AI agents can interact within the same ecosystem.

The big question isn't whether AI will continue growing. I think that's already happening.

The question is who builds the infrastructure that coordinates all of it.

If intelligence becomes abundant, coordination becomes scarce.

And scarce resources usually become the most valuable.

I’m still watching closely, but the more I study OpenLedger, the more I believe the market may be underestimating the importance of the layer nobody was pricing.

Sometimes the biggest opportunities are hidden where attention isn't looking.

@OpenLedger #OpenLedger $OPEN