CoinWorld News reports, ME News, October 6 (UTC+8), at the Silicon Valley 101 x RootData annual summit held in Silicon Valley, Gensyn co-founder and CTO Harry Grieve delivered a keynote speech titled (Expanding Machine Intelligence with Cryptographic Infrastructure). Harry Grieve pointed out that the current development of machine intelligence faces four major challenges: a genuine demand for ultra-large scale in terms of technology; economic oligopoly and asymmetric pricing of peripheral hardware; ethical issues related to 'machine rights' and 'computational rights'; and security risks including regulatory challenges. He proposed that the Gensyn protocol addresses these challenges by building a verification system that can prove model performance, using cryptography to safeguard property rights, and avoiding regulation through open source. Its technical architecture is based on four pillars: a super-scale training framework supporting multi-agent reinforcement learning, an optimal AI verification system, a zero-shot auxiliary learning toolkit, and a user-friendly EVM L2 blockchain. Additionally, Gensyn has already acquired 140,000 users, trained over 400,000 models, and completed over $50 million in financing, dedicated to building ultra-scale computing infrastructure for machine intelligence through a cryptographic network.