Nobody announced it. There was no press conference, no ribbon cutting. But right now, in the city you live in, decentralized networks are quietly doing the work that governments, telecoms, and corporations couldn't figure out how to fund.

Fluence handles the compute layer underneath applications that smart cities and enterprises are building right now. Developers deploy cloud workloads through $FLT without routing everything through a hyperscaler. The city's digital infrastructure runs. Nobody sees the blockchain underneath it.

Roam has connected over 3 million WiFi nodes across 190 countries. Every café, transit hub, and public space with a Roam miner is part of a seamless global network that automatically connects users without passwords or logins. The person who set up the router earns $ROAM

The city gets coverage it never had to budget for.

NATIX turns everyday drivers into a real-time sensor grid. Using smartphone cameras and computer vision AI, it maps potholes, traffic flow, road damage, and infrastructure changes as they happen. Urban planners and logistics companies buy that data. The driver earns $NATIX on their commute. The city gets a live map it couldn't afford to build on its own.

Silencio maps noise pollution block by block through phones sitting in pockets across thousands of cities. Governments use the data for zoning decisions and public health policy. The contributor earns $SLC. The phone was just there.

Roads, connectivity, compute, environmental data. Four layers of city infrastructure, crowdsourced, verified, and running — long before anyone thought to look.