#opg $OPG
I keep thinking about OpenGradient as more than just another AI network, because the real issue with AI right now is not only who builds the best model, it is who controls access to intelligence once those models become part of everyday life. That part matters. A lot.
OpenGradient feels interesting because it pushes AI toward open infrastructure, where models can be hosted, used, and verified without everything depending on a few closed systems. In theory, that changes the power balance. Not instantly. Not perfectly. But it gives the idea of Open Intelligence some actual structure behind it.
And maybe that is where the conversation should go. AI should not just be fast or impressive, it should be usable, checkable, and available at scale without asking permission from the same centralized players every time. That sounds simple, but it is not.
Decentralized AI still has a lot to prove, especially around performance and real adoption, but OpenGradient is touching the right problem. Intelligence should not become another locked gate.
