One thing I keep coming back to with OpenGradient is that it is trying to solve a problem most people overlook when talking about AI in crypto: trust.
Everyone is focused on smarter models, faster inference, and cheaper compute. But once AI starts touching treasury management, lending decisions, governance proposals, or automated transactions, the bigger question becomes simple: how do we know the system actually did what it claims?
That is where OpenGradient feels worth watching. The project ...
Looking through OpenGradient's agent stack docs, the part that caught my attention wasn't the verification layer, that's the part everyone expects. It was a short line about wallets. Rather than building its own transaction and signing infrastructure, OpenGradient plugs into existing third party wallet providers so a verified agent can move funds across most chains once it decides on an action.
Think of a courthouse that authenticates a document, stamps it, confirms it's genuine, puts it on per...