I lost money on a token once. The worst part? I had actually done the research.

It was just everywhere. A few notes in my phone. A chart screenshot buried somewhere in my gallery. Two red flags I dumped into a random doc. A thread I swore I'd reread and never opened again. So when I finally pulled the trigger, I had the information. I just didn't have it in front of me. The warning signs were already there. I couldn't see them through my own mess.

That's the thing @OpenGradient Chat fixed for me. Now I won't commit to anything until I bring everything into one place: the notes, the token details, the screenshots, the claims I copied off their site, and my own doubts. Then I let the AI tear into it: what's verified and what's just a claim, what needs a second source, what's thin, and the red flag I'm quietly hoping I can ignore.

It doesn't hand me a price prediction. It hands me a file: strongest points, weakest points, what's missing, the red flags, and the questions I still haven't answered. Exactly what I didn't have the time I lost money.

The privacy is the reason I'll actually put this stuff in there. Crypto research says a lot about you: what you're eyeing, what you might buy, what you're unsure about. I don't want that living inside some random AI tool.

Here, my messages are encrypted on my own device and my identity is stripped before anything hits the model, so the research isn't tied to me. The file doesn't sit on their servers either. It's encrypted on my device, not their backend.

I'll be straight about the limit: the model still has to read my prompt to help. This isn't "nobody ever sees the words." It's that the words can't be traced back to me. For sorting through sensitive research before I buy, that's the privacy I want.

The lesson from losing that money was simple. In crypto, you're rarely short on information. You're just trusting scattered information too fast.

This is the first thing that actually fixed that for me.

Try it: chat.opengradient.ai

#opg $OPG