I used to think the future of AI would be decided by bigger models.
Now I think it will be decided by ownership and incentives.
To me, OpenGradient is interesting because it's solving both.
MemSync challenges the idea that AI platforms should own our long-term memory, making it portable, encrypted, and controlled by the user instead.
At the same time, even the best infrastructure depends on people choosing to protect it. That's why bug bounties matter.
If responsible disclosure isn't the most rewarding option, security becomes an economic problem rather than a technical one.
In my opinion, verifiable AI, sovereign memory, and well-designed incentives are all part of the same goal: building an AI ecosystem that users can actually trust.
#opg $OPG @OpenGradient
$SPCXB
$VELVET
Now I think it will be decided by ownership and incentives.
To me, OpenGradient is interesting because it's solving both.
MemSync challenges the idea that AI platforms should own our long-term memory, making it portable, encrypted, and controlled by the user instead.
At the same time, even the best infrastructure depends on people choosing to protect it. That's why bug bounties matter.
If responsible disclosure isn't the most rewarding option, security becomes an economic problem rather than a technical one.
In my opinion, verifiable AI, sovereign memory, and well-designed incentives are all part of the same goal: building an AI ecosystem that users can actually trust.
#opg $OPG @OpenGradient
$SPCXB
$VELVET
