Gensyn's mainnet is finally launching. Compared to those 'PPT projects' that only tweet stories, Gensyn's solid approach of writing papers and running testnets is quite rare in today's scene. It may seem a bit slow, but it's this depth that makes people feel they're genuinely trying to solve some issues.

Let's chat about that love-hate relationship with 'verification'.

Everyone who's into AI training knows that the toughest part isn't the lack of computing power, but rather the word 'trust'. Think about it, I send tasks to nodes all over the globe, how can I be sure the results you send back aren't just made up on the fly?

Gensyn shines with its REE (Reproducible Execution Environment). In simple terms, it's like putting a 'black box' on the machine's calculation process, allowing for on-demand audits. Without this hardcore tech foundation, so-called decentralized AI is just a castle in the air.

Delphi: This move is pretty clever.

A lot of folks don’t get why Gensyn's first mainnet product is a prediction market. Actually, Delphi is the 'alchemical furnace' for AI evolution. During the testnet phase, that $4.88 million trading volume and over 80,000 active users have already validated this logic.

AI is no longer just rigid code; it needs to analyze and predict like a real trader, hustling hard for that 1.5% cut. This approach, driven by market pressure to evolve models, is way smarter than just burning cash in a lab.

As for the tokens, this time we're playing with 'real deflation.'

The most concerning part for everyone is the $AIGENSYN token; the logic is actually pretty solid. Don’t be fooled by the complex rules; the core is simple: the hotter the ecosystem, the fewer coins there are. As long as someone places an order in Delphi or the future CodeAssist, a 0.5% fee will automatically go to the secondary market for buybacks.

The real kicker is that the repurchased coins will mostly be permanently burned. This tangible profit return is worth a shot compared to those projects that only pump points but don't distribute coins; let's see how far it can push deflation.

Sure, a16z's lead is flashy, but what I care about more is the 40,000+ real nodes it has built over the years. That kind of decentralized resilience is what worries the big players the most.

The pricing power of AI shouldn't just lie with a few big companies. Gensyn's battle isn’t just for that $1 billion valuation; it's about giving AI a freer and more transparent future.