I keep thinking we’ve borrowed the wrong idea from the human economy. We assume AI agents will compete the way companies do, each trying to replace the others. But specialization usually creates cooperation, not isolation.
That made me wonder if the real challenge isn’t building more capable agents. It’s giving different agents a reason to depend on one another. An economy only emerges when participants can exchange value with confidence, not just produce output.
That’s what makes @OpenGradient interesting to me. If $OPG enables verifiable interactions between independent agents, the network becomes more than a collection of AI models. It starts looking like a place where intelligence can coordinate instead of merely coexist.
Maybe the future of AI won’t be defined by the smartest agent, but by how many agents can create value together.
#opg $VELVET $KGEN
What will matter more for the next AI economy?
That made me wonder if the real challenge isn’t building more capable agents. It’s giving different agents a reason to depend on one another. An economy only emerges when participants can exchange value with confidence, not just produce output.
That’s what makes @OpenGradient interesting to me. If $OPG enables verifiable interactions between independent agents, the network becomes more than a collection of AI models. It starts looking like a place where intelligence can coordinate instead of merely coexist.
Maybe the future of AI won’t be defined by the smartest agent, but by how many agents can create value together.
#opg $VELVET $KGEN
What will matter more for the next AI economy?
🧠 Smarter AI agents
🤝 Better AI coordination
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