AI Is Already Evaluating Pioneers Before the Grand Open Mainnet
The Enclosed Mainnet Is Not a Waiting Room – It's an AI-Driven Trust Evaluation Stage
Even Without Core Team Intervention, Algorithms Are Watching and Analyzing Every Action
True Pioneers Are Judged by Contribution – And the Evaluation Has Already Begun
Why Pioneers Who Acquire Pi for Profit Are Bound to Reject the "GCV"
Who Truly Deserves to Benefit from the GCV? The Definition of a Genuine Pioneer
[ This is a predictive analysis and may differ from actual outcomes. ]
1. AI May Already Be Quietly Evaluating All Pioneers
The Pi Network has grown into a massive ecosystem with tens of millions of KYC-approved users and over 100 million active participants. Managing such scale manually is virtually impossible. Thus, it is highly likely that an AI-based real-time evaluation system is already operating in the background—without needing direct intervention from the Core Team.
This AI could be observing on-chain transaction flows, usage of KYB-approved exchanges and onramps, wallet interaction patterns, and even metadata like memo field entries. It may also be assessing whether transactions uphold the Global Consensus Value (GCV) of 1 Pi =
$314,159, whether users are actively engaging in utility apps, running nodes, or contributing to the network through security circles and referrals. All this data together could form a comprehensive trust profile for each user and wallet.
2. The Enclosed Mainnet Was Not a Test—It Was a Behavioral Screening Ground
The Core Team has repeatedly stated that the enclosed mainnet was designed not merely as a technical sandbox, but as a buffer period for behavior observation and correction. In other words, this phase was purposefully created to collect real behavioral data while allowing users to experiment with real utility.
This means that if users ignored GCV standards, engaged in speculative trading, or tried to reuse externally acquired Pi, those actions were not invisible. On the contrary, they were likely tracked and archived as part of an ongoing assessment. The enclosed mainnet period was not just preparation—it was a silent challenge, a chance to prove one’s alignment with Pi’s values through actual behavior.
3. Entry into the Grand Mainnet Will Be Filtered by Trust and Contribution
When the Grand Open Mainnet launches, it’s unlikely that all KYC-passed users will be granted equal access and privileges. More likely, a range of automated trust scores will determine permissions, access to utility apps, and perhaps even exchange rights.
Those who respected the GCV standard in their transactions may be evaluated more favorably. Users who only used official, KYB-certified exchanges may be flagged as compliant, while those who ventured into unapproved platforms might trigger red flags. Participants who actively engaged in the ecosystem—by running nodes, contributing to utility apps, or growing the community—are more likely to be granted elevated access in the mainnet era.
These distinctions likely won’t be made manually. Rather, they’ll be automatically enforced based on accumulated behavior, analyzed by advanced AI systems.
Conclusion: Evaluation Is Already Underway, and AI Remembers Everything
Although the current Pi ecosystem appears open and loosely structured, sophisticated AI algorithms may already be monitoring and evaluating every user’s behavior. The enclosed mainnet isn’t a delay—it’s a designed filter, a test of values and actions.
By the time the Grand Open Mainnet arrives, it’s possible that each wallet has already been scored and categorized. The privileges granted will reflect past actions, not just identity verification.
In Pi, contribution is the true currency of trust—and that trust is being assessed right now.