CryptoMediaClub
Friday, May 22, 2026
  • All news
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Altcoins
  • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • Analysis
No Result
View All Result
  • All news
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Altcoins
  • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • Analysis
No Result
View All Result
CryptoMediaClub
No Result
View All Result
Home All news

Why Vitalik is Wrong About Self-Sovereign Computing

19.02.2026
A A
0
122
VIEWS
ShareShare

By Gaurav Sharma, CEO ofio.net

Vitalik Buterin recently declared 2026 the year to “take back lost ground in computing self-sovereignty.” He shared the changes he’s made personally: replacing Google Docs with Fileverse, Gmail with Proton Mail, Telegram with Signal, and experimenting with running large language models locally on his own laptop rather than through cloud services.

The instinct is sound. Centralised AI infrastructure is a genuine problem. Three companies – Amazon, Microsoft and Google – now control 66% of global cloud infrastructure spending, a market that reached $102.6 billion in a single quarter last year. When every prompt flows through this concentrated infrastructure, users surrender control over data that should remain private. For anyone who cares about digital autonomy, this should feel like a structural failure. But Vitalik’s proposed solution – hosting AI locally on personal hardware – accepts a tradeoff that doesn’t need to exist. For anyone trying to build serious AI applications, his framework offers no real path forward.

The ceiling on local compute

Running AI on your own device has obvious appeal. If the model never leaves your laptop, neither does your data. No third parties, no surveillance, no dependence on corporate infrastructure. This works for lightweight use cases. An individual running basic inference or a developer experimenting with a small model can create value with locally-hosted models. Vitalik acknowledges the current limitations around usability and efficiency, but frames them as temporary friction that will smooth out over time.

However, training models, running inference at scale and deploying agents that operate continuously demand GPU power that personal hardware cannot deliver. Even a single AI agent running overnight needs persistent compute. The promise of always-on AI assistants falls apart the moment you step away from your desk. Enterprise deployments require thousands of GPU-hours per day. A startup training a specialised model could burn through more compute in a week than a high-end laptop provides in a year. An ambitious research team might spend 80% or more of its funding just on GPU capacity – resources that could otherwise go to talent, R&D or market expansion. Well-capitalised giants absorb these costs easily while everyone else is priced out.

However, training models, running inference at scale and deploying agents that operate continuously demand GPU power that personal hardware cannot deliver. Even a single AI agent running overnight needs persistent compute. The promise of always-on AI assistants falls apart the moment you step away from your desk. Enterprise deployments require thousands of GPU-hours per day. A startup training a specialised model could burn through more compute in a week than a high-end laptop provides in a year. An ambitious research team might spend 80% or more of its funding just on GPU capacity – resources that could otherwise go to talent, R&D or market expansion. Well-capitalised giants absorb these costs easily while everyone else is priced out.

Local hosting doesn’t solve this, and implicitly accepts a binary that leaves most builders with nowhere to go: stay small and sovereign, or scale up and hand your data to Amazon, Google or Microsoft.

A false binary

The crypto community should be well-placed to recognise this framing for what it is. Decentralisation was never intended to shrink capability to preserve independence; it’s about enabling scale and sovereignty to coexist. The same principle applies to compute.

Across the world, millions of GPUs sit underutilised in data centres, enterprises, universities, and independent facilities. Today’s most advanced decentralised compute networks aggregate this fragmented hardware into elastic, programmable infrastructure. These networks now span over 130 countries, offering enterprise-grade GPUs and specialised edge devices at costs up to 70% lower than traditional hyperscalers.

Developers can access high-performance clusters on demand, drawn from a distributed pool of independent operators rather than a single provider. Pricing follows usage and competition in real time, not contracts negotiated years in advance. For suppliers, idle hardware can be transformed into productive capacity.

Who benefits from open compute markets

The impact extends well beyond cost savings. For the broader market, it represents a genuine alternative to the oligopoly that currently controls AI. Independent research groups can run meaningful experiments rather than scaling down ambitions to fit hardware constraints. Startups in emerging economies can build models for local languages, regional healthcare systems, or agricultural applications without raising the capital to secure hyperscaler contracts.

Regional data centres can participate in a global market instead of being locked out by the structure of existing deals. This is how we actually close the AI digital divide: not by asking developers to accept less powerful tools, but by reorganising how compute reaches the market. Vitalik is right that we should resist the centralisation of AI infrastructure, but the answer isn’t retreating to local hardware. Distributed systems that deliver both scale and independence already exist.

The real test of crypto’s principles

The crypto community enshrined decentralisation as a founding principle. Decentralised compute networks represent a chance to do what crypto has always claimed it could: prove that distributed systems can match and exceed centralised alternatives. Lower costs, broader access, no single point of control or failure. The infrastructure already exists; the question is whether the industry will use it, or settle for a version of sovereignty that only works if you’re willing to stay small.

The post Why Vitalik is Wrong About Self-Sovereign Computing appeared first on Cryptonews.

Share9Tweet6ShareSharePin2

Related Posts

XRP Price Defies Market Weakness as ETF Flows Crush BTC and ETH
All news

XRP Price Defies Market Weakness as ETF Flows Crush BTC and ETH

22.05.2026
0

XRP price is holding its ground while the rest of the market buckles, as supported by its ETF flow data....

Read moreDetails
Pro-Crypto Kevin Warsh Set for Trump Appointment Today: Big Weekend Rally?

Pro-Crypto Kevin Warsh Set for Trump Appointment Today: Big Weekend Rally?

22.05.2026
Dogecoin Could Become the Second Dog on the Moon After Snoopy as Whales Accumulate Ahead of SpaceX IPO

Dogecoin Could Become the Second Dog on the Moon After Snoopy as Whales Accumulate Ahead of SpaceX IPO

22.05.2026
Blockchain Poker Site CoinPoker, Triton Unite for 2026 Montenegro SHRS, Launch 25,000 USDT Giveaway

Blockchain Poker Site CoinPoker, Triton Unite for 2026 Montenegro SHRS, Launch 25,000 USDT Giveaway

22.05.2026
Polymarket Exploit: 5,000 POL Drained every 30 Seconds

Polymarket Exploit: 5,000 POL Drained every 30 Seconds

22.05.2026
Load More
Next Post
China’s Alibaba AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Shiba Inu and PEPE By the End of 2026

China’s Alibaba AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Shiba Inu and PEPE By the End of 2026

0 0 votes
Рейтинг статьи
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
guest
0 комментариев
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Recommended

El Salvador’s Volcano Energy Launches First Local Bitcoin Mining Pool

El Salvador’s Volcano Energy Launches First Local Bitcoin Mining Pool

3 years ago
Why Is Crypto Up? Six Straight Red Months Despite Today’s Bounce

Why Is Crypto Up? Six Straight Red Months Despite Today’s Bounce

2 months ago
Martial Law Chaos: South Korea Pauses ‘All’ Work on Crypto Legislation

Martial Law Chaos: South Korea Pauses ‘All’ Work on Crypto Legislation

1 year ago

Ethereum & Solana Price Growth Slows, But Ecoterra Continues to Rise

3 years ago

Categories

  • All news
  • Altcoins
  • Analysis
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Ethereum
  • NFT
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

Dogecoin Could Become the Second Dog on the Moon After Snoopy as Whales Accumulate Ahead of SpaceX IPO

Blockchain Poker Site CoinPoker, Triton Unite for 2026 Montenegro SHRS, Launch 25,000 USDT Giveaway

Polymarket Exploit: 5,000 POL Drained every 30 Seconds

LIVE – Crypto News, May 22: Happy Bitcoin Pizza Day! BTC USD Battling Support, ETH Morale at Rock Bottom

Why do Bitcoin traders care so much about the 200-day moving average?

XRP Price Manipulated? $63 Billion Futures Surge Still Can’t Move XRP

Trending

XRP Price Defies Market Weakness as ETF Flows Crush BTC and ETH
All news

XRP Price Defies Market Weakness as ETF Flows Crush BTC and ETH

22.05.2026
0

XRP price is holding its ground while the rest of the market buckles, as supported by its...

Mark Cuban’s Bitcoin sale tests the gap between a failed hedge and a surviving monetary bet

Mark Cuban’s Bitcoin sale tests the gap between a failed hedge and a surviving monetary bet

22.05.2026
Pro-Crypto Kevin Warsh Set for Trump Appointment Today: Big Weekend Rally?

Pro-Crypto Kevin Warsh Set for Trump Appointment Today: Big Weekend Rally?

22.05.2026
Dogecoin Could Become the Second Dog on the Moon After Snoopy as Whales Accumulate Ahead of SpaceX IPO

Dogecoin Could Become the Second Dog on the Moon After Snoopy as Whales Accumulate Ahead of SpaceX IPO

22.05.2026
Blockchain Poker Site CoinPoker, Triton Unite for 2026 Montenegro SHRS, Launch 25,000 USDT Giveaway

Blockchain Poker Site CoinPoker, Triton Unite for 2026 Montenegro SHRS, Launch 25,000 USDT Giveaway

22.05.2026
  • All news
  • Altcoins
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Ethereum
  • NFT
  • Analysis
Editor: cryptomediaclub.com@gmail.com
Advertising: digestmediaholding@gmail.com

Disclaimer: Information found on CryptoMediaClub is those of writers quoted. It does not represent the opinions of CryptoMediaClub on whether to sell, buy or hold any investments. You are advised to conduct your own research before making any investment decisions. Use provided information at your own risk.
CryptoMediaClub covers fintech, blockchain and Bitcoin bringing you the latest crypto news and analyses on the future of money.

© 2023 Crypto News. All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • All news
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Altcoins
  • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • Analysis

Disclaimer: Information found on CryptoMediaClub is those of writers quoted. It does not represent the opinions of CryptoMediaClub on whether to sell, buy or hold any investments. You are advised to conduct your own research before making any investment decisions. Use provided information at your own risk.
CryptoMediaClub covers fintech, blockchain and Bitcoin bringing you the latest crypto news and analyses on the future of money.

© 2023 Crypto News. All Rights Reserved

wpDiscuz