The first time I saw "trust" become technology was on @OpenLedger ($OPEN )

In the past, I always thought "trust" was an abstract thing that had to be built between people. It wasn't until I encountered #OpenLedger that I first saw "trust" could be technologized.

At that time, I was participating in an AI data collaboration project, with teams from around the world sharing training data. Such cooperation was difficult to carry out in the past because everyone was worried about data being tampered with or monopolized.

OpenLedger's decentralized trust infrastructure solved this problem. Once all data is on the chain, it can be traced and verified, and no single entity can modify or hide records. At that moment, I truly felt that transparency and security are not just slogans, but verifiable facts.

Now, I no longer need to rely on the promises of centralized platforms; I just need to look at the records on the chain. OpenLedger makes "trust" no longer an assumption, but a verifiable reality.

@OpenLedger #OpenLedger $OPEN

OPEN
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