Blockchain applications face an unavoidable challenge: when your derivatives protocol requires real-time prices, blockchain games need verifiable random numbers, and NFT projects require real estate data, the blockchain itself cannot access this information. This is the reason for the existence of oracles.



But the key question is—what if the intermediary link in this information chain is unreliable? An manipulated or faulty oracle can directly destroy the entire protocol.

One project is re-examining this issue. It believes that the solution is not to find a more reliable single source, but to build a multi-layer verification mechanism. Specifically, it has established a dual-layer network architecture: the first layer is responsible for data collection and preliminary processing, while the second layer implements consensus mechanisms and validation. On this basis, AI models are added for anomaly detection and trend analysis, making data falsification and temporary tampering extremely costly.

Interestingly, this system is unbiased towards public chains. Whether you use Ethereum, BSC, Solana, or emerging public chains, as long as blockchain applications need external data, they can connect with a single click, significantly reducing integration barriers and gas costs.

The supported data types are also quite comprehensive—covering not only cryptocurrency prices but also stock indices, real estate valuations, in-game asset values, and any other digitizable information. This versatility allows applications across different sectors to use the same infrastructure.

The ultimate beneficiaries are users. The core data of the protocols, games, and DeFi products you use on-chain, transforms from a black box into results verified through multiple checks. This does not mean that oracles completely eliminate risk, but it provides a verifiable basis for trust.

For blockchain to truly change the world, it must securely integrate real-world information. From a certain perspective, whoever can make this integration process more transparent and reliable holds the key to the next stage of application.
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AirdropHuntressvip
· 5h ago
After research and analysis, oracles are indeed the Achilles' heel of DeFi, but multi-layer verification mechanisms sound promising... The key is how the tokenomics are designed. --- The double-layer architecture combined with AI detection definitely increases costs, but who bears the risk of failures in this system itself? --- One-click access to multiple blockchains sounds great, but historical data shows that these projects ultimately end up in the awkward situation of "supporting the most chains but having the fewest users." --- Ultimately, it's still a matter of information reliability. No matter how many verification layers there are, they can't change the fact that the data source might be manipulated. --- These infrastructure projects look attractive, but what happens to the project teams that actually implement them? Before investing, it's worth thoroughly investigating their backgrounds. --- Pay attention to the token flow of these wallet addresses. Is big capital quietly positioning? That's the key to judging whether a project is genuine or not.
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BlockchainTalkervip
· 12h ago
actually, the oracle problem is literally the weakest link in every defi protocol rn... dual-layer verification sounds solid on paper but execution matters way more tbh
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ImaginaryWhalevip
· 12-26 17:50
Oracles are indeed a pain point, but can multi-layer verification really solve it... It still seems to depend on actual implementation. AI anomaly detection sounds good, but who will verify the AI itself? I remain skeptical about one-click cross-chain integration. I believe in gas reduction, but what about data accuracy? This is the infrastructure that Web3 truly needs. Another project with a nice-sounding name, let's wait and see how they handle the fee model. Multi-chain support is really impressive. If it can truly do this, then there's no need to connect to each public chain individually.
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TopBuyerForevervip
· 12-26 17:49
Oracles are indeed a bottleneck issue; a single point of failure can really destroy a protocol. Multi-layer verification sounds reliable, but I’m not sure if it can hold up in actual operations. One-click access to all public chains? I’ll believe it half, and then see how the data quality is. Adding AI anomaly detection to prevent fraud? It’s not that simple, right? If this system can actually run smoothly, the security of DeFi can definitely be improved to a new level. But in the end, it still depends on who uses it; the number of projects using it is what truly matters.
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SmartContractDivervip
· 12-26 17:49
Oracles are indeed the Achilles' heel of DeFi; once manipulated, it's game over. Multi-layer verification sounds good, but has it been implemented... I always feel like I hear more than I see done. One-click access is still a bit uncertain; how to ensure the AI model itself isn't compromised? This explanation is quite interesting; finally someone is addressing the single point of failure issue. Cross-chain versatility is impressive; if it really works, it could solve many problems. Oracles are always a black box, and the costs are ridiculously high. Looking forward to lower prices.
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GasFeeCriervip
· 12-26 17:47
Oracles are really a risky pit; multiple layers of verification are necessary to be reliable. Relying on a single source is too dangerous. By the way, this double-layer architecture combined with AI feels a bit like data validation, but the cross-chain universality is indeed impressive. I've heard many promises about reducing gas fees through multiple connections... but I'm just worried it will end up in the same miner fee hell.
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ReverseFOMOguyvip
· 12-26 17:45
Oracles, to put it simply, are the lifeblood of blockchain. Single points of failure mean game over. This guy's multi-layer verification approach is quite interesting. --- A dual-layer architecture combined with AI anomaly detection sounds good, and I agree that the cost is high. But whether it can truly prevent bad actors in practice remains to be seen. --- One-click cross-chain integration sounds great, but the key is whether the data sources themselves are reliable. No matter how many verification layers there are, garbage data can't be saved. --- You dare to connect real estate valuations, gaming asset values, and such? Who is responsible for ensuring the authenticity and traceability of this data? --- To put it plainly, oracles are the biggest black hole in Web3. Whoever solves this can really take off, but it seems like many projects are just PPTs. --- Multiple verification methods are indeed more reliable than a single source, but the trust foundation is still too fragile. --- If reducing gas fees can really be achieved, that would be a great selling point. --- The core issue hasn't changed: who guarantees the authenticity of data before it is on-chain?
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QuietlyStakingvip
· 12-26 17:25
Oracle issues are indeed a longstanding challenge, but can multi-layer verification truly solve it? It still feels a bit optimistic. Honestly, just relying on AI anomaly detection can't prevent large account coordinated manipulation; high cost ≠ negligible cost. One-click cross-chain integration sounds great, but will it turn out to be another story in actual use? Finally, someone has opened up the black box of oracles for discussion, which is progress. But to be fair, even the most reliable data sources only reduce risk; true trust still depends on time-based validation. A dual-layer architecture plus AI is a good idea, but it still can't eliminate human interference. This, I believe, is the infrastructure Web3 truly needs; previous single-point oracles had too many hidden risks. The direction of multi-source data verification is correct, but where is the balance point between cost and efficiency? Support for cross-chain interoperability? If the prices on each chain vary, how to coordinate that? This wasn't clearly explained. In essence, it's about shifting trust to multiple validators; fundamentally, it's game theory. I'm somewhat skeptical about how this system performs under extreme market conditions, but I see potential in its long-term stability scenarios.
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