Zuvu Artificial Intelligence and Vana are partnering to improve decentralized Artificial Intelligence on Bittensor, with the goal of creating a more accessible and financially viable Artificial Intelligence environment.
Zuvu Artificial Intelligence, previously known as SocialTensor, brings its experience in scaling Bittensor subnets to the discussion, while Vana, recently advised by Binance’s founder Changpeng Zhao, contributes its user-controlled data network.
This cooperation seeks to examine a novel model for Artificial Intelligence development that is transparent, collaborative, and financially viable by integrating key layers of the decentralized Artificial Intelligence stack.
The partnership arrives at a time when the Artificial Intelligence market is predicted to reach trillions of dollars by 2032. Zuvu supports the economic layer of Artificial Intelligence, enabling investment, staking, trading, and monetization of models, agents, and data, opening up new opportunities in the rapidly growing market. Art Abal, Managing Director at Vana Foundation, notes that the cooperation integrates Vana’s data layer, Bittensor’s subnet network, and Zuvu’s economic layer to improve Vana’s DataDAO environment and address key challenges in Artificial Intelligence development. TruBit Collaborates with Morpho to Introduce DeFi Unearned Revenue in Latin America
According to Abal and Zuvu Artificial Intelligence COO Daniel Raissar, this partnership is expected to enhance Bittensor’s subnet diversity, support the expansion of Vana’s DataDAO, and position Zuvu as a leader in Artificial Intelligence financialization, potentially influencing industry practices. The integration with Bittensor is strategic, leveraging its incentive-driven network to scale Artificial Intelligence development. By combining user-controlled data with permissionless computation and economic incentives, the collaboration mirrors decentralized finance’s disruption of traditional finance.
This collaboration emerges during a crucial period as open-source artificial intelligence gathers momentum, driven by the demand for substitutes for dominant, centralized AI entities. Bittensor’s growth to encompass 45 operational subnets embodies this burgeoning trend.