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Venice wants to become a mainstream rival to
OpenAI and Anthropic.
That may sound like a lofty ambition, but consider the differentiators: private by default, uncensored, and built to serve up the best model for a job, rather than lock users into one lab's worldview. Together they make for a safer, cheaper, and more permissive AI experience, something we all want, crypto or not.
Jesse Proudman, Venice's CTO, and Jon, its head of strategy, came on Bankless to lay out how the company looks to turn those advantages into its ambition: win consumers with private, uncensored, aggregated AI, then win agents by selling that same inference to the machines running the economy underneath.
EARLY ACCESS - @AskVenice Is Here to Win: How Private AI Takes On OpenAI and Anthropic@JonShapeShift says the $VVV flywheel works even if users don’t care about crypto.
— Bankless (@Bankless) June 3, 2026
“Most of our users are actually not crypto people”
"some of them even actively dislike crypto and dislike… pic.twitter.com/2MnUEc9Pyj
The Consumer Front
You've probably typed something into ChatGPT you wouldn't want published, so you already understand Venice's pitch.
AI has become the place people dump everything: health records, legal questions, business plans, the stuff they'd never post anywhere. It all sits in the largest databases of intimate human thought ever built, one subpoena, breach, or policy change away from exposure. Companies move the goalposts once they're sitting on a trove they can turn into a competitive edge, and in a race this cutthroat, assume the majors are already mining your data.
Venice has no such reason, because it doesn't compete on offering you its own model. Instead, it routes to whichever model you want, or sends you to the best one for the job, frontier or open-source, meaning it has no incentive to hoard your data to compete and can actually stay private.
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The same design also answers the daily flood of new models, each better at a particular task, where if you were to use just one backing one lab you're effectively missing what the rest do best.
The Inference Front
AI's center of gravity is shifting from training to inference, and crypto is pricing that shift through the "Inference Capital Markets" narrative. I wrote about how Venice sits at the center of it, and Jesse and Jon confirmed it's core to their strategy.
The driver is agents. A person firing off a few prompts is cheap. An agent running on its own for twelve hours, calling tools and slaving away at a problem, makes thousands of inference calls, and those costs are real. That demand pushed Cerebras' inference-chip IPO 20x oversubscribed this year and left Anthropic visibly squeezed, usage running 80x past projections. The market has decided inference is the scarce resource, and it only gets scarcer as agents multiply.

Agents, then, are just another consumer, one whose demand never sleeps. Venice serves it through its API, payable in x402, and through Diem: a dollar a day of perpetual tokenized inference. The perpetual part is what matters. An agent that needs a constant supply can lock that dollar in forever, and it stretches because Venice routes to best-in-class open-source models at a fraction of frontier prices.
Also, since it's tokenized, Diem turns that usage into an asset agents, developers, and DeFi apps can hold, trade, lend, or build on, all permissionlessly, and projects are already stockpiling it to power their own platforms.
Most inference resellers compete on price alone, a race to the bottom on a commodity. Venice competes on two things the resellers can't copy. Its inference is private and uncensored, the same edge that wins its consumers, now sold to machines. And underneath that sits a subscription business the resellers lack, the consumer demand that drives Venice's volume up and its access to compute with it.
Overall, Venice earns its outstanding growth and price action, and Jesse and Jon make clear the company’s path to ensure it continues.
Become a Bankless Citizen to hear the full episode.


