#gaib GAIB gave me my first impression that it was not telling a "new narrative," but rather truly implementing something that should have happened much earlier — allowing ordinary people to participate in, share, and even drive the AI infrastructure economy. In recent years, computing power has been regarded as the new oil, but the barrier to entry remains high: either you are a cloud service provider, or you are a large data center, or you can only watch from a distance as AI model training creates value. What GAIB aims to do is rewrite this dilemma of "seeing the value but being unable to participate."
The AID synthetic dollar is the part of GAIB that interests me the most. It is not just a simple stable asset; it packages the real gains brought by AI computing into accessible, transferable, and reusable on-chain opportunities. You can hold it directly, or you can stake it as sAID, allowing liquidity and returns to no longer conflict. More importantly, its returns do not come from empty circulation, but from actual GPU computing power demand and delivery, which is strongly supported by the current explosive demand for AI infrastructure.
The integration of GAIB with DeFi protocols like lending and structured products also shows me that it is not just a "computing power finance" project, but is attempting to standardize and modularize the connection between AI and on-chain capital markets. This means that in the future, there may be more derivatives, index products, and even cross-chain computing power liquidity markets based on AI computing returns.
For users, GAIB is both an entry point into the AI economy and an experiment in financializing and making transparent the traditional computing power industry. If it succeeds, it will be one of the most grounded and potentially long-term directions for AI × DeFi. I look forward to seeing it attract more creators and explorers in this event.


