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#NasdaqWorstDayInOverAYear The AI trade just hit a wall. The Nasdaq plunged 4.2% in its worst day since April 2025 as investors dumped tech and semiconductor stocks. What changed? A stronger-than-expected jobs report reignited fears that the Fed could keep rates higher for longer. Bond yields surged. AI stocks got hit. Chipmakers faced heavy profit-taking. The result: • S&P 500: -2.6% • Dow: -700 points • Semiconductors: Biggest drop since 2020 For months, AI could do no wrong. Now the market is asking a different question: Are AI valuations running too far ahead of reality?
#NasdaqWorstDayInOverAYear The AI trade just hit a wall.
The Nasdaq plunged 4.2% in its worst day since April 2025 as investors dumped tech and semiconductor stocks.
What changed?
A stronger-than-expected jobs report reignited fears that the Fed could keep rates higher for longer.
Bond yields surged. AI stocks got hit. Chipmakers faced heavy profit-taking.
The result:
• S&P 500: -2.6% • Dow: -700 points • Semiconductors: Biggest drop since 2020
For months, AI could do no wrong.
Now the market is asking a different question:
Are AI valuations running too far ahead of reality?
#genius $GENIUS Ce document présente le PropAMM natif de Genius. GeniusFi, le premier propAMM de son genre construit spécifiquement pour la chaîne BNB, est destiné à être le hub de liquidité central pour traiter ~$727B/an dans le flux on-chain qui est actuellement acheminé à travers des AMM dexes classiques et basiques sur le réseau. Le TAM est le marché total de flux pour la courte traîne d'actifs qui constituent ~90% du flux actuel sur la chaîne BNB, ainsi que, éventuellement, la longue traîne d'actifs pour compléter la domination de Genius dans l'écosystème BNB. Leçons de Solana Les Prop AMM de Solana gagnent en efficacité du capital Les 18 à 24 derniers mois sur Solana ont rendu impossible de nier que pour les marchés hautement liquides et à courte traîne, les conceptions de Prop AMM opérées par des market makers surpassent les pools passifs en termes d'exécution. Des Prop AMM comme HumidiFi sont capables de proposer des spreads serrés, des prix compétitifs avec une liquidité élevée, et des frais bas, battant même des CEX mainstream comme @Binance_Margin #GeniusOficial .
#genius $GENIUS Ce document présente le PropAMM natif de Genius. GeniusFi, le premier propAMM de son genre construit spécifiquement pour la chaîne BNB, est destiné à être le hub de liquidité central pour traiter ~$727B/an dans le flux on-chain qui est actuellement acheminé à travers des AMM dexes classiques et basiques sur le réseau. Le TAM est le marché total de flux pour la courte traîne d'actifs qui constituent ~90% du flux actuel sur la chaîne BNB, ainsi que, éventuellement, la longue traîne d'actifs pour compléter la domination de Genius dans l'écosystème BNB.
Leçons de Solana
Les Prop AMM de Solana gagnent en efficacité du capital
Les 18 à 24 derniers mois sur Solana ont rendu impossible de nier que pour les marchés hautement liquides et à courte traîne, les conceptions de Prop AMM opérées par des market makers surpassent les pools passifs en termes d'exécution. Des Prop AMM comme HumidiFi sont capables de proposer des spreads serrés, des prix compétitifs avec une liquidité élevée, et des frais bas, battant même des CEX mainstream comme @Binance Margin #GeniusOficial .
Article
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Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence plaWhy OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes. This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is. The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me. When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgott#

Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence pla

Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure
I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes.
This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is.
The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me.
When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgott#
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#openledger $OPEN $BTC #Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes. This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is. The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me. When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgotten
#openledger $OPEN $BTC #Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure
I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes.
This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is.
The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me.
When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgotten
#USCourtDeniesKalshiPolymarketPause Revers de situation pour les marchés de prédiction ⚖️ La cour refuse la suspension : Kalshi et Polymarket doivent faire face aux poursuites des États Une cour d'appel fédérale américaine a officiellement rejeté une demande de Kalshi et Polymarket visant à suspendre les litiges d'exécution en cours au Nevada et à Washington. Cette décision signifie que ces plateformes doivent continuer à se défendre contre des réclamations au niveau des États pendant que leur appel fédéral plus large avance. La Décision : La cour a constaté que les entreprises n'avaient pas réussi à prouver que la poursuite dans les tribunaux des États causerait un "préjudice irréparable". Les Enjeux : Cela maintient la pression sur le secteur des contrats d'événements en pleine croissance alors que les États soutiennent que ces plateformes ressemblent à des jeux d'argent illégaux. La régulation au niveau des États devient-elle le plus grand obstacle pour les marchés de prédiction Web3 ? 🏛️$
#USCourtDeniesKalshiPolymarketPause Revers de situation pour les marchés de prédiction ⚖️
La cour refuse la suspension : Kalshi et Polymarket doivent faire face aux poursuites des États
Une cour d'appel fédérale américaine a officiellement rejeté une demande de Kalshi et Polymarket visant à suspendre les litiges d'exécution en cours au Nevada et à Washington. Cette décision signifie que ces plateformes doivent continuer à se défendre contre des réclamations au niveau des États pendant que leur appel fédéral plus large avance.
La Décision : La cour a constaté que les entreprises n'avaient pas réussi à prouver que la poursuite dans les tribunaux des États causerait un "préjudice irréparable".
Les Enjeux : Cela maintient la pression sur le secteur des contrats d'événements en pleine croissance alors que les États soutiennent que ces plateformes ressemblent à des jeux d'argent illégaux.
La régulation au niveau des États devient-elle le plus grand obstacle pour les marchés de prédiction Web3 ? 🏛️$
Article
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OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been aroundOpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale. That last part matters. For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box. That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution. The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network. I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces. Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO $OPEN {spot}(OPENUSDT) #

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale.
That last part matters.
For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box.
That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution.
The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network.
I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces.
Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO $OPEN
#
Article
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OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been aroundOpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale. That last part matters. For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box. That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution. The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network. I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces. Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.$OPEN {spot}(OPENUSDT) #OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale.
That last part matters.
For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box.
That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution.
The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network.
I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces.
Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.$OPEN
#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO
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#openledger $OPEN {future}(OPENUSDT) OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies.!
#openledger $OPEN
OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies.!
Voir la traduction
$OPEN {spot}(OPENUSDT) #OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because
$OPEN
#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because
salut 👋
salut 👋
AMITSolanki12
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75% des institutions financières prévoient d'augmenter l'utilisation de l'IA pour la détection des crimes.
Les systèmes de détection alimentés par l'IA de Binance ont aidé à protéger nos utilisateurs de pertes potentielles de 10,53 milliards de dollars US de 2025 jusqu'au premier trimestre 2026.......
$LUNC est en repli… et honnêtement, c'est ici que les vrais croyants se forgent. 👀🔥 Alors que d'autres paniquent à chaque bougie rouge, je vois cette chute comme une opportunité. Je viens d'ajouter plus de $LUNC car la vue d'ensemble n'a toujours pas changé. Les gens riaient quand nous parlions d'objectifs impossibles avant… Maintenant, ils regardent de près. 👀 Le rêve est toujours vivant : $0.5 pour $LUNc Fou ? Peut-être. Impossible ? Dans la crypto, rien n'est impossible. 🚀 Un mouvement fort de baleine, une massive vague de burn, un cycle de hype… et ce marché peut exploser plus vite que prévu. 💥 Après cette correction, je ne serais pas surpris de voir LUNç pousser vers la zone $0.0003. Peut-il descendre plus bas d'abord ? Bien sûr. Peut-il monter plus fort que quiconque ne s'y attend ? Oui aussi 😂 C'est la beauté de la crypto — personne ne sait vraiment ce qui vient ensuite. La peur se transforme en FOMO en quelques secondes. Les mains faibles partent pendant les corrections. Les mains fortes construisent pendant le silence. 💎 Je suis toujours là. Toujours en train de hold. Toujours en train de croire. Qui est encore avec l'armée $LUNC ? 🔥🚀#LUNC #Binance #TrendingTopic #cryptouniverseofficial $BTC {future}(BTCUSDT) {spot}(LUNCUSDT)
$LUNC est en repli… et honnêtement, c'est ici que les vrais croyants se forgent. 👀🔥
Alors que d'autres paniquent à chaque bougie rouge, je vois cette chute comme une opportunité.
Je viens d'ajouter plus de $LUNC car la vue d'ensemble n'a toujours pas changé.
Les gens riaient quand nous parlions d'objectifs impossibles avant…
Maintenant, ils regardent de près. 👀
Le rêve est toujours vivant :
$0.5 pour $LUNc
Fou ? Peut-être.
Impossible ? Dans la crypto, rien n'est impossible. 🚀
Un mouvement fort de baleine, une massive vague de burn, un cycle de hype… et ce marché peut exploser plus vite que prévu. 💥
Après cette correction, je ne serais pas surpris de voir LUNç pousser vers la zone $0.0003.
Peut-il descendre plus bas d'abord ? Bien sûr.
Peut-il monter plus fort que quiconque ne s'y attend ? Oui aussi 😂
C'est la beauté de la crypto — personne ne sait vraiment ce qui vient ensuite.
La peur se transforme en FOMO en quelques secondes.
Les mains faibles partent pendant les corrections.
Les mains fortes construisent pendant le silence. 💎
Je suis toujours là.
Toujours en train de hold.
Toujours en train de croire.
Qui est encore avec l'armée $LUNC ? 🔥🚀#LUNC #Binance #TrendingTopic #cryptouniverseofficial $BTC
🇮🇷🇺🇸 L'IRAN RÉAGIT À LA PROPOSITION DE PAIX DES ÉTATS-UNIS. AUJOURD'HUI Un mémo d'une page. 14 points. L'Iran arrête d'enrichir de l'uranium pendant plus de 12 ans. Les États-Unis lèvent les sanctions. Hormuz rouvre. La guerre se termine... en théorie. Le pétrole a chuté de 15% hier. Puis a récupéré la moitié. Les marchés ne savent pas quoi croire. Personne d'autre non plus.
🇮🇷🇺🇸 L'IRAN RÉAGIT À LA PROPOSITION DE PAIX DES ÉTATS-UNIS. AUJOURD'HUI
Un mémo d'une page. 14 points. L'Iran arrête d'enrichir de l'uranium pendant plus de 12 ans. Les États-Unis lèvent les sanctions. Hormuz rouvre. La guerre se termine... en théorie.
Le pétrole a chuté de 15% hier. Puis a récupéré la moitié. Les marchés ne savent pas quoi croire. Personne d'autre non plus.
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Haussier
#soolan # Avertissement de prudence concernant #sol ⚠️ la blockchain de Solana est de nouveau en danger. Plusieurs cyberattaques ont eu lieu sur le réseau #solana, et des millions ont été volés. Même maintenant, Solana n'est pas totalement en sécurité. Elle a été fortement pumpée, et cela ressemble à un pump bidon. Essayez de prendre une position short sur #sol ou évitez de trader #sol complètement jusqu'en juin car elle n'est plus fiable. Vous verrez #Sol dump si fort que les gens seront choqués qu'il ait une chance de retomber à $50.#SOL空投 {spot}(SOLUSDT)
#soolan # Avertissement de prudence concernant #sol ⚠️
la blockchain de Solana est de nouveau en danger. Plusieurs cyberattaques ont eu lieu sur le réseau #solana, et des millions ont été volés. Même maintenant, Solana n'est pas totalement en sécurité. Elle a été fortement pumpée, et cela ressemble à un pump bidon. Essayez de prendre une position short sur #sol ou évitez de trader #sol complètement jusqu'en juin car elle n'est plus fiable. Vous verrez #Sol dump si fort que les gens seront choqués qu'il ait une chance de retomber à $50.#SOL空投
75% des institutions financières prévoient d'augmenter l'utilisation de l'IA pour la détection des crimes. Les systèmes de détection alimentés par l'IA de Binance ont aidé à protéger nos utilisateurs de pertes potentielles de 10,53 milliards de dollars US de 2025 jusqu'au premier trimestre 2026.......
75% des institutions financières prévoient d'augmenter l'utilisation de l'IA pour la détection des crimes.
Les systèmes de détection alimentés par l'IA de Binance ont aidé à protéger nos utilisateurs de pertes potentielles de 10,53 milliards de dollars US de 2025 jusqu'au premier trimestre 2026.......
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Haussier
#BullishIPO 🚨 EN DIRECT | 16-08-2025 🚨 Le monde de la finance est à nouveau en pleine mutation alors que nous entrons dans une nouvelle ère de **introductions en bourse haussières**. Ces dernières années, les marchés traditionnels et la crypto ont commencé à fusionner, avec des entreprises liées à la technologie blockchain se préparant à entrer en bourse sur des marchés majeurs. Une introduction en bourse haussière ne représente pas seulement de nouvelles cotations, elle représente **une confiance institutionnelle massive** affluant dans l'économie numérique. Lorsqu'une entreprise décide de lancer une introduction en bourse dans ce climat, cela montre une forte croyance dans la croissance à long terme, l'innovation et l'adoption de modèles commerciaux basés sur la blockchain. Les investisseurs regardent attentivement, car une introduction en bourse haussière peut déclencher de nouveaux **flux de capitaux**, créer de nouvelles opportunités et renforcer la confiance tant dans les marchés de la crypto que dans ceux des actions. C'est plus qu'une simple cotation—c'est un signal que **l'avenir de la finance est décentralisé, numérique**.
#BullishIPO 🚨 EN DIRECT | 16-08-2025 🚨
Le monde de la finance est à nouveau en pleine mutation alors que nous entrons dans une nouvelle ère de **introductions en bourse haussières**. Ces dernières années, les marchés traditionnels et la crypto ont commencé à fusionner, avec des entreprises liées à la technologie blockchain se préparant à entrer en bourse sur des marchés majeurs. Une introduction en bourse haussière ne représente pas seulement de nouvelles cotations, elle représente **une confiance institutionnelle massive** affluant dans l'économie numérique. Lorsqu'une entreprise décide de lancer une introduction en bourse dans ce climat, cela montre une forte croyance dans la croissance à long terme, l'innovation et l'adoption de modèles commerciaux basés sur la blockchain.
Les investisseurs regardent attentivement, car une introduction en bourse haussière peut déclencher de nouveaux **flux de capitaux**, créer de nouvelles opportunités et renforcer la confiance tant dans les marchés de la crypto que dans ceux des actions. C'est plus qu'une simple cotation—c'est un signal que **l'avenir de la finance est décentralisé, numérique**.
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