$OPG The next battle in AI may not be about who builds the smartest models.
It may be about who owns the intelligence that powers them.
Most people use AI services.
Very few own the underlying AI infrastructure.
Access and ownership are not the same thing.
Open intelligence introduces a different vision.
A future where intelligence is transparent, verifiable, and accessible.
Innovation becomes stronger when more people can participate.
Not just consume.
But build, govern, and contribute.
Decentralization is not the destination.
Trust, resilience, and accountability are.
Projects like @OpenGradient are exploring this path.
TEE can help protect sensitive computation.
zkML can improve verifiability.
Privacy-preserving AI can give users more control over data.
Decentralized computation can reduce dependence on centralized systems.
The opportunity is significant.
So are the engineering challenges.
Scalability, security, usability, and sustainability still matter.
The deeper question remains:
Will society be satisfied with renting intelligence?
Or will it demand ownership and transparency?
As AI becomes critical infrastructure, open intelligence could become one of the most important technology movements of the next decade.
What matters more to you:
Access to AI?
Or ownership of the intelligence infrastructure itself?