🔥 The oracle problem has always hindered the development of Web3 — but the APRO oracle has completely changed the game. Smart contracts are completely blind. No prices, no documentation, no real-world events. This is the classic oracle problem. Solve it incorrectly → fragile decentralized finance. Solve it correctly → unlock the next era. APRO is not your grandfather's price-feeding oracle. It is built for DeFi *as well as* AI agents *and* RWAs. Multi-dimensional data across more than 40 chains. Three core pillars: 🟢 **APRO Data Services** — a true oracle that can provide push/pull for dApps and DeFi. Reliable, fast, no nonsense. 🟢 **APRO AI Oracle** — real-time verifiable data directly to AI models. Say goodbye to hallucinations and outdated outputs. AI agents finally have the serum of truth. 🟢 **APRO RWA Oracle** — converts chaotic real-world content (legal documents, images, contracts) into on-chain verifiable gold. Dual-layer AI + decentralized consensus = unbreakable. - Max supply: 1 billion $AT (permanently fixed) - Circulation: about 230 million - Long-term distribution: ecosystem, staking rewards, fair public issuance, team, foundation, liquidity. No sell-off pressure, only pursuing sustainable growth. Technical advantages: hybrid off-chain speed + on-chain cryptographic proof. Time-weighted pricing to combat manipulation attempts. The future of Web3 relies on verifiable data. APRO ensures the accuracy, scalability, and is ready to enter the golden age. 🚀
$AT Recently, I have been observing the trend of $AT , and many people are discussing the possibility of it falling to extremely low price levels. The issues reflected behind this are worth paying attention to—how high is the technical barrier of many altcoins? Take oracle projects as an example; some believe the core is just a piece of code that can be copied and pasted to create. This view indeed hits at some projects' weaknesses. But the question is, if it were really that easy to copy, why is the market still continuously updating and iterating? Regardless, this discussion reminds us that when evaluating crypto assets, we cannot only look at names and stories; we need to examine how solid the underlying technical moat and community support really are.