If you carefully observe AI development over the past two years, you'll notice an increasingly obvious contradiction. AI capabilities are improving rapidly, but computing power, models, and interfaces are still controlled by a small number of large platforms.


Developers using AI often have no choice but to rely on centralized APIs, which not only lack price transparency but are also entirely controlled by platforms.
The emergence of @dgrid_ai is essentially changing this structure.
DGrid is building a decentralized AI inference network where developers can access different large models through a unified AI RPC interface, while inference tasks are automatically distributed to globally distributed nodes for execution.
Nodes run models to complete inference tasks and settle and verify them through on-chain mechanisms, forming an open AI computing network.
More critically, DGrid introduces a Proof of Quality system for result verification. Through multi-node validation of inference result accuracy and consistency, it avoids AI outputs being completely dependent on a single node, thus solving the black-box problem of traditional AI services.
In my view, what DGrid truly changes is not a specific function, but the ownership structure of AI infrastructure itself.
In the past, AI was more like a platform service, but in this network, computing power providers, model developers, and application developers can all directly participate in value distribution.
AI inference is beginning to transition from centralized services to an open network resource. This change is likely to redefine how Web3 and AI combine.
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