I have been through enough cycles in crypto to know that this market is exceptionally good at turning old ideas into new slogans.
Collective intelligence sounds compelling, but I think that if collective intelligence only means gathering more signals, more people, and more models, then it still does not solve the core problem. The problem has never been a lack of answers. The problem is that no one can be sure which answers are actually trustworthy. Mira touches that pain point directly, because it does not stop at praising collective intelligence, but pushes the idea toward a harder layer, verified intelligence, where AI outputs are broken down into verifiable claims and then validated through decentralized consensus across multiple models.
What makes Mira stand out to me is not the narrative, but the structure. Their whitepaper makes it clear that the goal is to turn outputs into independent claims, use a network of verifiers to validate each part, and then generate cryptographic proof for the result. That is a far more practical direction than the usual model of having to trust AI first and use it later.
Maybe after too many years of watching the market overhype speed, I have come to value projects that return to the harder questions of correctness, reliability, and incentive design for honest behavior. Mira is not selling the dream of all powerful AI. Mira is trying to build an infrastructure layer that makes AI less fragile. And in a market where trust has become the scarcest asset, I think that is the direction that matters most.