I return repeatedly to the Mira network because it treats the biggest weaknesses of artificial intelligence as practical problems, not philosophical ones. Its core idea is simple: instead of relying on the answer of a single model, that answer is broken down into claims, which are then examined by other models, and a verifiable result is presented. This is more important now because artificial intelligence is gradually moving from just conversations to tools that people want to use with less human oversight, even in areas where mistakes have a significant impact. Over the past year or so, Mira has transitioned from just a research paper to launching a testing network and API, then to the main network, and now to a beta version of Mira Verify aimed at standalone applications. For me, this evolution is the real story. The timing makes sense as the discussion has shifted from focusing on what AI can say to what it is allowed to do when dealing with real systems.@mira_network

$MIRA

MIRA
MIRAUSDT
0.08729
+5.58%

#Mira