📅 Just sold 115u of the Alpha airdrop from yesterday, $O . What a major win, real big gains! This time the diamond hands paid off. Although the quantity of alpha has dropped significantly, the quality has definitely leveled up. There are solid entry points in both primary and secondary markets. Looking forward to tonight's TGE spot performance.
The night I got my new phone, I typed out a phrase I've repeated countless times to my AI assistant: "I love working late, don't send me morning reminders."
This was the fourth time. From my computer to my phone, from old devices to new ones, it always greets me like an enthusiastic stranger, smiling and asking about my preferences. I feel like a family member of an amnesiac, having to reintroduce myself over and over. That night, staring at the screen, I accepted the reality: this is how AI’s long-term memory works. Either endure the repetition or hand over all chat logs to big companies. Privacy and memory, it seems, really can't coexist.
Until I mined the MemSync at @OpenGradient .
What it does is precisely what I wanted that night: semantic memory stores preferences and values, situational memory retains events and timelines, all unified into a searchable personal knowledge base. But what truly surprised me wasn't what it could remember, but how it protects this information—multi-party secure computation with shard encryption. Node operators can't view the full content separately; they only engage in secure collaborative computation when needed. The data is yours, but no one can peek, not even the platform itself. $OPG
What impressed me the most is cross-device portability. Conversations from my phone transfer seamlessly when I switch to my computer or change blockchain proxies. No need to repeat explanations, not tied down by any platform. Your AI finally gets to know you for real.
I jotted down in my notes: The AI that truly belongs to you recognizes you wherever you are, but it doesn't know a thing about you at anyone else's place.
I once felt hopeless about this. Now I feel it's worth getting excited about again.
#opg
The night I got my new phone, I typed out a phrase I've repeated countless times to my AI assistant: "I love working late, don't send me morning reminders."
This was the fourth time. From my computer to my phone, from old devices to new ones, it always greets me like an enthusiastic stranger, smiling and asking about my preferences. I feel like a family member of an amnesiac, having to reintroduce myself over and over. That night, staring at the screen, I accepted the reality: this is how AI’s long-term memory works. Either endure the repetition or hand over all chat logs to big companies. Privacy and memory, it seems, really can't coexist.
Until I mined the MemSync at @OpenGradient .
What it does is precisely what I wanted that night: semantic memory stores preferences and values, situational memory retains events and timelines, all unified into a searchable personal knowledge base. But what truly surprised me wasn't what it could remember, but how it protects this information—multi-party secure computation with shard encryption. Node operators can't view the full content separately; they only engage in secure collaborative computation when needed. The data is yours, but no one can peek, not even the platform itself. $OPG
What impressed me the most is cross-device portability. Conversations from my phone transfer seamlessly when I switch to my computer or change blockchain proxies. No need to repeat explanations, not tied down by any platform. Your AI finally gets to know you for real.
I jotted down in my notes: The AI that truly belongs to you recognizes you wherever you are, but it doesn't know a thing about you at anyone else's place.
I once felt hopeless about this. Now I feel it's worth getting excited about again.
#opg