I have been thinking about a question: If AI really becomes an "economic entity", how would its income be valued? This is not a metaphysical question; it is a very real issue. Because today, AI is already creating value, from cleaning robots to warehousing robots, from GPU inference to data labeling links. AI is not a virtual concept; it is an entity that generates quantifiable cash flow. And when machines start making money, the human financial system is not ready to accommodate this new way of value flow. Because real-world banks do not issue salary cards to robots, nor will they handle the returns of GPU computing power. What to do? You must create a new monetary system that can connect the way AI generates value with the human financial system. The concept of AID, this synthetic dollar, is essentially an "economic participation ID card" provided to AI and robots. This is the most interesting and futuristic aspect of the entire GAIB system that I see. Many people only see AID as a stable asset but do not notice that its role is not to provide stability, but to provide "value expression capability". Look at today's world: if you have a robot working in the real world, most companies can only use traditional financing methods to mortgage this device. The cash flow cycle is slow, risk assessment is complex, time-consuming, and inefficient. But GAIB's approach is to structure the future yield of robots and GPUs, to break it down, assess it, and convert it into a risk that can be understood and traded on the chain. It digitizes the cash flow of the AI world into a penetrable financial product, and then uses AID to establish a pegged relationship with it. In this moment, the AI world has obtained a "salary card". What you will see in the future is no longer "how much revenue does the robot generate each month" but rather "this part of cash flow will automatically flow into the AID system and then to the sAID holders". The biggest difference from traditional finance is that traditional finance relies on human credit ratings, risk models, and legal structures, while GAIB builds a credit system for machines and computing power. The usage rate of a GPU is its credit; the parameters of a robot working per hour are its repayment ability. This is the first time humanity has created a financial system for machines that is independent of the human credit system. So when I see everyone discussing whether GAIB is an AI DeFi attempt, I always feel they are underestimating things. What GAIB is doing is not "bringing AI into DeFi" but establishing a financial system that belongs to AI. This system just happens to use the chain as the underlying layer because the chain is currently the only system that can quickly mark assets, transparently record cash flows, and allow permissionless movement globally. I believe the future of GAIB will take three paths. The first is "generalized financing of AI assets". In the past, financing was a business behavior; in the future, financing will become a "machine behavior". As long as your robot can create cash flow, you can enter the GAIB system and obtain financing. This is a paradigm shift from enterprise level to device level. The second is "assetization of machine labor income". In other words, in the future, not only humans will work; machines will also create value in society. GAIB is the first system that allows the labor income of machines to be split, traded, and held. The third is "standardization of AI's economic identity". You can think of AID as a value base. As more and more AI devices and computing nodes enter the GAIB system, they will all share the same set of income distribution logic and the same settlement path. This is like a country's monetary system, an abstract yet unified value rule. You will find that when these three paths overlap, GAIB is no longer a project but a whole new economic zone, the value track of the future AI economy. Let me share an interesting detail: AID is essentially backed by U.S. Treasury bonds and stable assets. This means it holds both the most traditional value anchor of the real world and the most cutting-edge value flow of the AI world. This is equivalent to allowing human economic systems and AI economic systems to intersect for the first time within a financial structure. This is our first time creating "safe currency" for machines. sAID is the second layer; it gives safe currency a yield property and allows yield to enter the on-chain liquidity network. Once it is integrated with lending agreements, structured products, and large asset management agreements, this system will explode in growth like early LSD. However, its foundation will no longer be the staking of ETH, but the real income of the AI industry. I even believe that five years from now, we won't be discussing "are you staking sAID" but rather "how much cash flow did your AI device group produce last year". This change is not a conceptual revolution but a revolution in production relations. It allows ordinary people to participate in the AI economy for the first time, not by speculating, but by relying on real productive capacity, using wallets to hold a portion of the AI world's income. This mode of participation will give people a greater sense of control than speculating on currencies because you are earning "AI's salary", not chips lost by others. Today, GAIB seems like a narrative, but it may become infrastructure in the future. Just like we once thought DeFi was a niche, but later discovered that the logic of DeFi would permeate all financial services. So do you think AI's income system will be an exception? As machines become increasingly capable of action and labor, they will also have their own cash flow like humans, and GAIB is the first player trying to establish a unified settlement system for this new type of economic entity. This is a matter greater than most people realize.