Why @OpenGradient Veil Feels Like an Important Step Forward

While reading about @OpenGradient Veil what stood out to me was how it changes the trust model around inference

Traditionally developers send prompts to an endpoint and trust that everything in between is working as expected The process is convenient but most of it remains invisible You receive a response yet you have very little insight into how that response was handled along the way OPG

@OpenGradient Veil takes a different approach Instead of treating privacy and verification as optional extras it places them directly in the inference path Prompts are routed through a decentralized network of attestable Nitro TEE gateways and responses are cryptographically verified before they reach the application

A simple way to think about it is package delivery Most services ask you to trust that your package arrived untouched @OpenGradient Veil is closer to receiving a sealed package with proof that every checkpoint along the journey followed the expected process

What interests me most is the broader implication As autonomous applications become more common the question may no longer be who provides the computation but whether that computation can be independently verified

The future may belong to systems that reduce trust assumptions rather than simply asking users to trust more

@OpenGradient #opg $OPG $MUB $NVDAB

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