Not when it’s hosted on someone else’s server.
Not when the models can be throttled, restricted, or censored.
Not when your data is the product.
It’s time we talk about what’s really going on.
A Thr~ead↓
GPT. Grok. Claude. All of them.
They’re useful, sure.
But if you’ve ever had your responses go weird, or your access cut off, or just felt like your conversations were being watched…
It’s because you’re not in control. They are.
And that’s by design.
Most of today’s AI runs like Web2 in a trench coat:
– Centralized servers
– Hidden filters
– Zero transparency
– Terms that can change anytime
– And models you can’t verify or move
It’s fast food for the mind. You get convenience, but no power.
@notthreadguy said:
> “If ChatGPT convo history ever gets hacked, I’m going into hiding.”
And honestly? I get it.
We treat these tools like therapists.
We tell them things we wouldn’t say out loud.
But they don’t belong to us.
And the logs? They’re not yours either.
@notthreadguy I stumbled on something different.
It’s called @OpenxAINetwork and it’s not your regular chatbot or wrapper on top of ChatGPT.
It’s a fully decentralized AI infrastructure.
That means the compute, the models, the execution…
All of it lives in your hands.
Here’s the big difference:
•Bare-metal infrastructure
You don’t run AI on someone else’s cloud. You either run your own machine or rent one from an open GPU marketplace.
No AWS. No Google Cloud.
•Own your models
Deploy your model. Use your rules. No filters. No approvals.
•Track everything on-chain
From compute cycles to payouts, it’s all transparent.
@OpenxAINetwork You don’t need to be a dev either.
With OpenXAI Studio, you can drag, drop, and deploy your model like it’s a Canva project.
✅ Pick a server
✅ Upload a model
✅ Chat via Ollama
✅ Done
No code. No setup. Just your AI, running your way.
@OpenxAINetwork Everything runs on top of something called Xnode, a modular framework for building AI services.
Think:
Inference blocks.
Data handling blocks.
Compute routing blocks.
Each task isolated. Each service upgradeable.
It’s like DeFi legos but for AI.
I Wasn’t Looking for It… But I Think I Just Found What Web3 Has Been Missing
A quiet fix for Solana mobile apps that actually makes sense, and I need you to see it too.
This wasn’t something I planned to find.
I wasn’t deep in dev mode. I wasn’t searching for some secret framework.
But then I stumbled on something called Solana App Kit.
And I haven’t stopped thinking about it since.
Because after watching so many great crypto ideas stall, fade, or never get built at all…
This felt like a real missing piece finally got dropped into place.
A Thr~ead↓
You Ever Notice How Hard It Is to Build for Mobile in Web3?
We talk a lot about speed.
We praise low fees.
We celebrate innovation.
But behind all the headlines, there’s this one quiet truth:
> Building real mobile crypto apps is still way harder than it should be.
•Wallets break.
•Onboarding sucks.
•UX feels like a compromise.
•And builders waste days just wiring things together.
It’s not that the ideas are bad.
It’s that the tools never really kept up.
Then I Found @solanaappkit
It’s not flashy.
It’s not shouting.
But that’s exactly what makes it feel powerful.
Solana App Kit is a mobile-first, open-source framework for building Solana apps, fast.
Made by the team at @thesendcoincom, it’s designed to help developers get a production-ready mobile app running in 15 minutes or less.
Seriously,one command:
“npx start-solana-app”
No maze of docs. No "dev tutorials part 4 of 9."
Just… progress.
And as I explored it more, I realized:
Not only is this useful. It's kind of a quiet revolution.
Everyone loves to say “Bitcoin is the most secure network in the world.” And they’re right.
But here's the uncomfortable truth:
That same Bitcoin is barely used.
Not because people don’t believe in it. But because they’ve never had the tools to build with it.
That’s changing. Quietly. Powerfully. With ₿apps.
Let me show you what I just discovered 👇
We’ve been treating Bitcoin like digital gold. Lock it away. HODL. Wait.
But in doing so, we’ve sidelined it from what it was meant to be: a living, breathing money system.
Meanwhile…
•Exchanges earn more BTC fees than the entire Bitcoin network
•Millions of BTC sit on custodial platforms
•Wrapped BTC is doing laps on other chains
It’s not that BTC doesn’t have demand.
It’s that Bitcoin-native apps have been missing.
Until now.
What Are ₿apps?
»Imagine using BTC without wrapping it.
»Imagine building apps that are secured by Bitcoin, not just “inspired” by it.
»Imagine earning, borrowing, trading, and building directly on Bitcoin’s security.
That’s what a ₿app is:
> A non-custodial app that uses BTC or BTC-denominated assets, and inherits Bitcoin’s finality and safety.
No middlemen.
No bridges that ask for your blind trust.
Just a new category of apps that finally unlock BTC’s full potential, with zero compromises.
I’ve never been the type to get excited about Web3 domains.
Honestly, they always felt like digital vanity plates, nice to look at, but with no real utility. Just something people flexed on their wallets or Twitter bios. So for the longest time, I stayed away. No .sol, no .eth, no .ton nothing.
But something shifted recently, and now, I can say with full confidence:
owning a domain might be one of the smartest Web3 plays I’ve made.
Let me show you why.
A Thr~ead↓
It started with a simple curiosity.
I came across this platform called @AllDomains_, built on @solana. The flow was smooth: I connected my wallet, searched for my name, and saw nakins.solana was available. Clean, personal, and it only cost me 0.06 SOL. I shrugged and bought it.
Took <1 minute.
What I didn’t expect was everything that came next.
Let’s be real, how many domains are just sitting out there doing nothing?
People bought them early for clout or just FOMOed into a cool handle. But they’re idle now. No income. No use case. Just digital land grabs collecting dust.
That’s the gap.
And that’s exactly what .sol PLUS was built to solve.