Yesterday, I was cruising through crypto posts and somehow ended up reading about OpenGradient.
To be honest, I almost skipped it.
These days, it feels like every project is adding AI to its narrative, and after seeing the same buzzwords over and over, it's tough to get hyped up.
But I kept reading.
What stood out wasn’t the tech itself. It was the problem they’re trying to tackle.
Most of us use AI without giving a second thought to what’s happening in the background. We write something, get a response, and move on with our day. I do the same.
The more I thought about it, the more I realized that trust could become one of the major themes in AI over the coming years.
If AI is going to be used for bigger and more important things, people will naturally want to know where the results come from and if they can be verified.
That’s why OpenGradient caught my eye.
I wasn’t looking for a project that promised the fastest speeds or the biggest numbers. I was more interested in whether someone was trying to solve a real issue.
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe the industry is heading in a completely different direction.
But right now, projects that think about transparency and verification seem way more interesting to me than those focused solely on the hype.
For that reason, OpenGradient is one I’ll be keeping an eye on to see how things develop.
@OpenGradient #OPG $OPG
To be honest, I almost skipped it.
These days, it feels like every project is adding AI to its narrative, and after seeing the same buzzwords over and over, it's tough to get hyped up.
But I kept reading.
What stood out wasn’t the tech itself. It was the problem they’re trying to tackle.
Most of us use AI without giving a second thought to what’s happening in the background. We write something, get a response, and move on with our day. I do the same.
The more I thought about it, the more I realized that trust could become one of the major themes in AI over the coming years.
If AI is going to be used for bigger and more important things, people will naturally want to know where the results come from and if they can be verified.
That’s why OpenGradient caught my eye.
I wasn’t looking for a project that promised the fastest speeds or the biggest numbers. I was more interested in whether someone was trying to solve a real issue.
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe the industry is heading in a completely different direction.
But right now, projects that think about transparency and verification seem way more interesting to me than those focused solely on the hype.
For that reason, OpenGradient is one I’ll be keeping an eye on to see how things develop.
@OpenGradient #OPG $OPG