Binance’s AI skills hub attracted 97 open pull requests in days, while OKX’s rival launch drew zero, sparking debate on crypto builder culture
Crypto exchanges have entered a new kind of competition. This time, it is not about trading fees or token listings.
On March 3, 2026, Binance launched its open-source AI skills hub, called binanceskillshub. Just four hours later, OKX released its own version, onchainosskills. The results, however, told two very different stories.
Within days of its launch, the Binance skills hub had attracted 97 open pull requests on GitHub.
A pull request signals that a developer is actively building or proposing new features. Ninety-seven of them in under three days is no small number.
According to a post by crypto analytics account Meta Financial AI on X, this figure stands well above the average GitHub project activity for a comparable timeframe.
Developers were not just watching. They were pitching ideas, opening discussions, and submitting code. The binanceskillshub repository became an active space for builders almost immediately after it went live.
Meta Financial AI described the response as record-level engagement for an open-source project of this kind.
OKX told a different story. Its onchainosskills repository launched on the same day. Yet at the time of reporting, it had zero open pull requests. It had gathered just 11 stars and 2 forks on GitHub.
Binance, by contrast, had already collected 287 stars and 49 forks. The gap was wide and visible.
Related Reading: Binance Launches AI Agent Skills for Crypto Trading
The comparison extended beyond just Binance and OKX.
Meta Financial AI also pointed out that Bybit’s official AI skills repository is actually a fork of a project started by a volunteer. The exchange did not build its own from the ground up.
Many other major crypto exchanges, the post noted, do not even have an official AI skills repository at all.
This detail drew attention to how exchanges differ in their approach to open-source development. For some, the move into AI tools is a strategic priority. For others, it is an afterthought. Bybit’s reliance on a community fork suggests the latter, at least for now.
The disparity raises questions about which exchanges are genuinely investing in builder ecosystems. An official repository carries weight. It signals that a company is putting real resources behind a product.
A forked volunteer project carries a different message entirely.
Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, widely known as CZ, responded to the attention on X. His post was brief. He wrote:
The comment read as a nod to Binance’s dominant position, suggesting that developers and AI tools alike are drawn to platforms with depth and activity.
Meta Financial AI framed the success of binanceskillshub as a cultural achievement, not a technical one. The account argued that Binance has spent years building a community of developers around its ecosystem.
When the skills hub opened, that community was already in place and ready to contribute. The door opened, and builders walked in.
The post highlighted a shift in how crypto exchanges are now competing. It is not just about price or speed.
Attracting builders, fostering a developer culture, and maintaining open-source credibility are now part of the game. By those measures, the early numbers show Binance well out in front. Whether OKX and others can close the gap remains to be seen.
The post Binance Leads New AI Skills War as OKX Launch Falls Flat: CZ Reacts appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.


